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  • Man Group, the UK-based hedge fund investment company, has appointed Chris Chambers, the former co-head of European equity capital markets at Credit Suisse First Boston, as chief executive of Man Investment Products. Chambers, who left CSFB on Wednesday, joins Man this month to spearhead its growing presence in the alternative investment product market. Man has more than doubled its assets under management in the last two years. Its funds have grown from $4.7bn under management in March 2000 to over $10bn.
  • CVRD, the privatised Brazilian iron ore and mining conglomerate, will today (Friday) price a $300m five year bond carrying political risk insurance, the first of a number of structured Latin corporate bonds pricing this week. Other deals ready for pricing include a $250m five year future flow MT-100 export receivables transaction by Brazil's Banco Itau and a $100m eight year MT-100 and family remittances deal by Banco Agricola of El Salvador. Unibanco of Brazil has also just mandated Deutsche Bank to underwrite a $200m 10 year subordinated debt issue with some form of convertibility risk insurance.
  • Continuing its efforts to build up a comprehensive Asian franchise , Deutsche Bank has appointed Jonathan Paul as chairman of global markets Asia Pacific and hired Philip Mok to be head of Greater China equity research. Paul's new responsibilities will be in addition to his role as head of Asian global market sales. Part of his new title will be to help manage Deutsche Bank's business initiatives across the whole of Asia Pacific and Japan, together with taking a senior client relationship role. Paul reports to Anshu Jain, head of global markets.
  • Deutsche Bank has set up a new corporate governance unit to give more guidance to its analysts covering emerging market stocks. The unit will be led by Renato Grandmont, a Deutsche Latin American strategist who conducted research last year to find the best corporate governance in Latin America.
  • Private equity group Dresdner Kleinwort Capital (DrKC) and recruitment consultancy Pedersen & Partners have teamed up again to launch a management buy-out/management buy-in (MBO/MBI) club in Hungary. The two firms had linked up to launch a similar venture in Poland at the end of last year.
  • The German cartel office's rejection of Deutsche Telekom's planned Eu5.5bn cable sale to Liberty Media led to renewed speculation this week over the Eu10bn flotation of T-Mobile. Both Moody's and Standard & Poor's (S&P) put the operator on review for downgrade, citing the failure to sell the cable assets and the uncertainty over the T-Mobile IPO.
  • Croatia Joint mandated arrangers Mizuho (Dai-Ichi Kangyo Bank) and Zagrebacka banka are preparing to launch a $100m syndicated medium tenor term loan for Industrija Nafte (INA), a 100% state owned oil and gas company.
  • National Bank of Egypt is set to test market appetite for Middle Eastern risk with a new $250m term loan. The loan, which is yet to be mandated, will be the first fully syndicated credit for an Egyptian borrower since September 11 2001.
  • Eléctricité de France (EdF) exited Pechiney, the French aluminium company, on Wednesday and Thursday, raising Eu368m. EdF received the bulk of its 7.8% stake in the aluminium company when Pechiney was privatised in December 1995 and took the decision to sell its holding this week as part of a reweighting of its portfolio.
  • National Bank of Egypt is set to test market appetite for Middle Eastern risk with a new $250m term loan. The loan, which is yet to be mandated, will be the first fully syndicated credit for an Egyptian borrower since September 11 2001.
  • Poland * Republic of Poland
  • Small cap investors were relieved this week after an influential EU committee voted to change proposals to create a single prospectus for European equity and bond issuance. The proposals had threatened to damage the small-cap market across Europe, as the requirements would have been a burden for small companies and could have deterred some from issuing capital on the stock markets.