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  • National Rural Utilities Cooperative Finance, a financial cooperative with more than USD20 billion in collective assets, has entered interest rate swaps on the back of a USD1.25 billion bond offering it sold recently. John Suter, assistant treasurer in Herndon, Va., said the cooperative raised the cash through a seven-year fixed-rate offering and entered three separate swaps to convert the liability into a synthetic floater and maintain 40% of its portfolio in floating-rate.
  • Credit-default protection on Verizon Communications and its subsidiary Verizon Wireless tightened last week amid growing speculation that the Federal Communications Commission will allow wireless operators to pull out of a nearly USD16 billion sale of licenses. Five-year protection on Verizon, the U.S. local phone company, tightened by roughly 70 basis points Thursday while protection on its wireless unit narrowed by about 100bps, according to traders in New York. The parent tightened to roughly 270bps Thursday from 340bps the previous day, while the less-liquid Verizon Wireless tightened to 340bps from about 440bps.
  • Bear Stearns has hired Deutsche Bank's Jeff Zavattero, head of integrated credit trading in Japan. Zavattero is expected to work for Eric Langille, senior managing director in the credit derivatives department in New York, when he starts later this week. Langille declined comment.
  • Ball Corp., a U.S. producer of metal and plastic food packaging with about USD4 billion in annual revenue, is planning to become a more active user of interest-rate swaps upon completion of a pending USD887 million acquisition in Germany. The planned initiative will occur after Ball, a member of the Standard & Poor's 500 Index, completes its purchase of Schmalbach-Lubeca, which was announced last month and is expected to close next quarter.
  • Credit Suisse First Boston recently hired Y.J. Chang, associate in credit derivatives sales at JPMorgan in Seoul, as v.p. in emerging markets sales. Chang said he made the move to get a wider mandate that encompasses fixed income products in addition to credit derivatives. He now reports to S.Y. Choi, head of emerging market sales in Seoul.
  • Deutsche Bank has added a layer of management to coordinate its global interest-rate exposure across over-the-counter derivatives and other fixed income products. Thomas Paul, head of fixed income for the Americas, will relocate to London from New York to be head of the interest rate risk committee. Ted Meyer, a Deutsche Bank spokesman in New York, said the position was created to better coordinate the way the bank takes interest rate risk. He declined to say if any specific market activities led the bank to create the new role, except to say the bank wants to "take advantage of Thomas's skills."
  • Credit-default swap protection on Hong Kong's Hutchison Whampoa widened last week on the back of an impending USD1 billion bond offering. Five-year protection jumped to 210-220 basis points early last week from 195-210bps, according to Sonia Lee, v.p. and Asian credit trader at Credit Lyonnais in Hong Kong. Another trader noted that over USD50 million of default-swaps was traded around the announcement with a possible USD50 million more executed directly with clients. Typically, Hutchison trades about USD30 million per week, noted traders.
  • Deutsche Bank and JPMorgan recently structured a USD650 million bond for Korea Electric Power Corp.--the first bond in Korea on which a credit-default swap was written to reduce the cost of funding. The power company saved about KRW27 billion (USD22.5 million) by writing credit protection on the back of the bond offering, according to a KEPCO official. Credit traders at rival firms said it is likely that there is some degree of cash collateral on the back of the default swap to offset the correlation risk of a Korean company writing protection on its sovereign.
  • "The role is looking at structured credit connections and delivering these products to different types of institutions," Falk said. He reports to Brian Reid, managing director and head of the institutional client group in New York. Reid said Falk's background on the ABS side will be instrumental in structured credit.
  • Exelon has decided to exit weather derivatives, emissions, coal and congestion trading after designating these markets illiquid, according to market officials who have spoken to the company. As a result of the decision it has let go several staff, including Peter Frantz, head of weather derivatives in Kennett Square, Pa. Calls to Frantz were referred to Ben Armstrong, a company spokesman, who said Exelon Generation continues to actively trade the commodity markets. He was unable to comment on Frantz or the four markets the company is exiting. Frantz could not be reached.
  • Dresdner Kleinwort Wasserstein plans to start selling structured hedge fund notes through syndicates of firms to increase the size of transactions. "This will take the fund derivatives market to a new level," said Mehraj Mattoo, managing director and global head of alternative investments in London. He predicted that a syndicated note could be around EUR200 million (USD195 million), which is four times the size of a typical private placement.
  • Fitch Ratings plans to move its Italian structured finance team to Milan on Jan. 1. Patrizia Lando, senior director and head of the Italian structured finance team in London, said it is moving the team because of the increasing importance of the Italian market. "There needs to be someone there to explain the deals to investors and be close to the clients," said Lando. The move follows the increasing independence of Italian structuring desks, explained Lando, adding that previously Italian firms would work with a London based investment bank to structure the deal and that the investment bank would chose the rating agency. But, now most of the decisions come straight from Milan.