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  • Rating: Aaa/AAA/AAA
  • Amount: £250m
  • If Eurostar had been operational in the mid-1980s, Patrick Stevenson would have been a frequent traveller. He is credited for building up Banque Paribas Capital Markets (BPCM) from scratch from 1985, ceaseless shuttling between London and Paris. BPCM invariably headed the league tables for Ecu bonds between 1985 and the early 1990s, but Stevenson made it more than a single currency player.
  • Paul Richards' is the consummate Merrill Lynch banker. He joined Merrill in 1986 and, apart from one year spent at Goldman Sachs and a six month sabbatical, he has spent his 17 year career in banking at the firm. Today he is responsible for its syndicate function in London, as well as its frequent borrower business.
  • Paul Sherwood, who spent his entire career at Strauss, Turnbull & Co, was always linked with his trading colleague Stanley Ross, but the two could not have been more different. Ross was the flamboyant extrovert. Sherwood was the eminence grise standing in the background who knew everything and who was a brilliant visionary.
  • Paul White is head of the frequent borrower and corporate syndicate at ABN Amro, where his no nonsense, no fuss style has made him popular with borrowers and syndicate managers alike. He started his City career aged 16. Having left school on the Friday, he started at Morgan Grenfell on the Monday, working as a back office clerk in the Gilts business.
  • A three year equity bear market and record-low bond yields have seriously challenged defined benefit pension funds. While the value of pension fund assets has dropped, the value of liabilities, which have properties similar in nature to long dated (inflation-linked) fixed rate debt, has increased. Making the challenge even greater, retirees tend to live longer and thus require pension payments for a longer period of time.
  • Paul Young is one of the rare breed of US bankers to make a successful transition into the intensively competitive European bond market.
  • The Euromarkets may have been shaped by myriad innovations and trends, but it's the people that count, says Jerome Lienhard, senior vice president of global debt funding at Freddie Mac.
  • One head of syndicate describes Peter Charles as an icon in the syndicate world. As head of European corporate syndicate at Citigroup in London, Charles admits to being a dealaholic on the desk and wouldn't be anywhere else.
  • Peter Engstrom was head of international borrowing at the Swedish National Debt Office between 1981 and 1986, presiding over the funding of one of the most innovative and prolific issuers in the market. He worked on groundbreaking structures such as innovative long dated FRNs and perpetual flip flops. Engstrom commanded widespread respect for his receptiveness to new ideas.
  • Born in New Jersey in 1951, Peter Luthy read economics at Dartmouth College before taking a giant leap forward into - wait for it - carpentry.