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  • Deutsche Bank has allocated the amendment and restatement for the Celanese transaction.
  • German prosecutors are considering whether to launch a criminal investigation into Citigroup after BaFin, the financial markets regulator, said on Monday that it had found evidence that the bank's traders manipulated the German government bond futures market last August.
  • Construction company MCB Limited may tap the loan market to partly fund the Eu1bn East Side project in Gibraltar. The project involves the building of 2,200 apartments, underground car parks, a marina, a four star hotel and offices.
  • Are General Motors bonds headed towards the scrapyard? Whatever happened to the glory days when reasonably discerning American folk were actually proud to own a Cadillac and a Chevrolet Corvette helped to pull impressionable young ladies?
  • Rating: A1/A+/AA-
  • The Greek government appears to be stepping up the pace of its privatisation programme, with an announcement that it plans to list Athens airport by the end of the year, raising up to Eu990m.
  • Several big structured deals were in the market this week, and CDS levels fell everywhere. Until this week, the structured credit market had been relatively subdued in 2005. The main indices had edged lower and the bid for credit remained stronger. But CDS levels had not plummeted lower under the undeniable weight of large scale CDO hedging.
  • With nearly every G7 economy reaching the peak of its cycle in 2004 and the US debt bubble at bursting point, the global rollercoaster looks like taking a fast run downhill this year. Jonathan Compton of Bedlam Asset Management names the sectors and countries most likely to go off the rails, and picks a few surprise winners.
  • Mandated arranger Commonwealth Bank of Australia will close syndication of Fordwell Investment's $30m three year term loan today (Friday). The facility is guaranteed by Burwill Holdings, Burwill Resources and Burwill Steel Pipes.
  • Bankers fear that revenues in the corporate loan market could plummet in 2005 due to aggressive refinancings and a collapse in volumes.
  • Rating: A2/A