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  • Howard Tiffen is a managing director with Van Kampen Investmentsand senior portfolio manager for Van Kampen's senior loan funds.
  • Premcor Refining Group has aggressive debt leverage and participates in the very competitive, capital intensive and erratically profitable petroleum refinery industry, according to Standard & Poor's.
  • Incumbent lead arranger J.P. Morgan was not invited to lead railroad company Kansas City Southern's (KCS) new $250 million credit facility.
  • John Crotty has resigned from Morgan Stanley where he was a high-yield salesman. He worked for Mike Donoghue, head of credit sales.
  • Amy Siskind, a managing director of bank debt trading at The Seaport Group, has left the firm.
  • A spate of leveraged companies issuing Income Deposit Securities (IDS) has caused Standard & Poor's to raise concerns over the potential usage of the hybrid security, which is beginning to pick up in popularity.
  • MasTec has requested amendments to its $125 million credit facility with Fleet Securities, now Bank of America, related to violations due to a registered net loss of $39.7 million on revenue of $873.9 million in 2003.
  • Moody's Investors Service has set the coverage areas for the five managing directors in its collateralized debt obligation group, following the recent elevation of two staffers to the managing director level.
  • Morgan Stanley has hired a trio of ex-Fleet Securities loan pros including Todd Dahlstrom, Michael Cunningham, and Eric Vandermel following Fleet's merger with Bank of America.
  • The primary market was somewhat uninteresting to many investors last week, as they chose not to participate in new issues. Here are some deals in which investors did have at least some interest.
  • The following is a list of prominent personnel moves from around the U.S. and European markets.
  • A group of private-equity firms have announced plans to move into middle-market financing claiming the market is underserved.