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  • Foreign investors have long eyed the double digit yields to be made on the rouble bond market, but 2005 looks to be the year that they finally overcome their risk aversion and jump in. But what impact will this have on the market and the domestic bank players that make up such a large part of its investor base, asks Kathryn Wells?
  • JP Morgan has rescheduled the bank meeting for the buy-out of food producer Cesare Fiorucci for next week because of Pope John Paul II's funeral in Rome today (Friday). The meeting had been scheduled for this past week.
  • Guarantor: Japan
  • Bank TuranAlem has signed a $50m one year syndicated Murabaha facility through bookrunner Calyon.
  • KfW
    Guarantor: Federal Republic of Germany
  • The kiwi dollar was the centre of attention in the retail currency markets in an otherwise quiet week.
  • Mandated lead arranger RZB has signed Baltic Trust Bank's Eu10m facility.
  • After doing the usual rounds of the houses yesterday we thought to ourselves that we ought not to have bothered, being met, as we were, with as much peer talk as you can fit into a midge's pocket.
  • March was the worst ever month for US convertible hedge fund returns, according to Goldman Sachs's hedge fund index, released this week.
  • Venezuela is preparing to sell a minimum $1bn dollar denominated 20 year bond, payable in Venezuelan bolivars. The bond is intended for local investors looking to get exposure to foreign currency under the country's strict foreign exchange controls.
  • Barclays, HSBC, Lloyds TSB and Royal Bank of Scotland have signed banks in to the £1.2bn five year facility for bookmaker William Hill. Two tickets were on offer: £75m for fees of 20bp and £40m for 15bp.