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  • PTT, Thailand?s largest oil and gas producer, priced a Bt19bn ($443m) return to the bond market last Friday ? easily the biggest bond from the country this year.
  • Australia and New Zealand Banking Group benefitted from a surge of domestic demand for bonds when it launched a A$730m 2014 call 2009 tier two subordinated deal on Tuesday.
  • Deutsche Bank has appointed Kee-Young Im as head of global corporate finance, Korea. Im has also been made a vice chairman of global corporate finance, Asia, a vice chairman of Deutsche Securities Korea and a member of the Asia Pacific Global Corporate Finance Operating Committee.
  • ABN AMRO was last week on the brink of hiring a pair of high-yield professionals in London and recently added a third high-yield banker.
  • David L. Babson & Co. plans to raise the credit quality of its corporate bond allocation in the coming months.
  • Aidan de Brunner, manager in corporate finance with a focus on debt restructuring at Close Brothers Corporate Finance in London, recently resigned.
  • Delta Airlines and Goodyear Tire & Rubber both canceled plans to present at the conference, which in hindsight gave investors a heads-up that the companies were planning to come out with significant news.
  • Just two months ago we were worried that the abysmal level of foreign demand for U.S. corporate debt that was seen in the data for January would become a trend that could undermine this important source of funding for U.S. corporations.
  • A recurring theme from some investor attendees was the lack of distressed companies, which buyers said was indicative of the hurdles they are facing in sourcing distressed collateral.
  • A trio of European high-yield deals were pulled last week and a proposed E1.6 billion offering by German chemicals group Celanese looks increasingly likely to be placed entirely in the U.S. as the outlook for European junk deteriorates.