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  • SG Australia this week launched a A$482.5m securitisation backed by residential mortgages originated through Resimac, SG's in-house mortgage financing programme vehicle. Residential Mortgage Accep-tance Corporation is a trust manager and servicer that funds mortgages for about 40 small originators in Australia, as well as for the larger AIMS Home Loans.
  • EuroWeek understands that Taiwanese authorities want the pulled Chunghwa Telecom American Depository Receipt (ADR) issue to be resurrected this year. However, bankers close to the issue say that the adverse market conditions across the globe and the miserable performance of the Taiwan stock market in the past 18 months, which is down more than 65%, make a deal this year highly improbable.
  • The Thai government has approved the IPO of Petroleum Authority of Thailand, giving the firm the green light to sell up to 850m new shares. The minimum number will be 500m, but the final amount will be determined by the share price on issue. The Thai finance ministry this week announced that it would not dispose of any of its own shares, instead allowing PTT to sell up to 850m new shares. The MoF then hopes to sell a further Bt30bn-Bt40bn of PTT stock within a few years of the listing.
  • The bond markets continued their recovery this week, and with many borrowers joining the new issue pipeline, a return to normality is approaching. Sentiment was lifted by a further 50bp rate cut from the US Federal Reserve. In the dollar market, US oil company Conoco tested appetite for triple-B credits and passed with flying colours, increasing its three tranche fixed rate bond to $3.5bn from $2.5bn. A 30 year tranche was added at the last moment in response to investor feedback, joining five and 10 year tranches.
  • In a move that prompted speculation about its top level fixed income management, Merrill Lynch's Kelly Martin is to replace Win Smith as head of the international private client group. At the same time, Tom Davis moves from running the corporate and institutional group to run an expanded private equity business. He becomes a vice chairman of Merrill Lynch & Co. Smith, who as well as running the private client side of the business was chairman of Merrill Lynch International, has decided to retire - a decision he took after hearing of Martin's move, and apparently after it was announced.
  • In a move that prompted speculation about its top level fixed income management, Merrill Lynch's Kelly Martin is to replace Win Smith as head of the international private client group. At the same time, Tom Davis moves from running the corporate and institutional group to run an expanded private equity business. He becomes a vice chairman of Merrill Lynch & Co. Smith, who as well as running the private client side of the business was chairman of Merrill Lynch International, has decided to retire - a decision he took after hearing of Martin's move, and apparently after it was announced.
  • SBAB has dropped Lehman Brothers and the Industrial Bank of Japan from its $8 billion Euro-MTN programme. Barclays Capital has been added to the dealer panel.
  • Finland Nordea and SEB have been mandated to arrange a Eu100m five year multi-currency revolver for KCI Konecranes.
  • Hypothekenbank in Essen has upped its euro10 billion ($9.14 billion) Euro-MTN programme to euro15 billion. The facility, which is arranged by Merrill Lynch and Commerzbank, has $8.84 billion outstanding.
  • Sri Lanka Sole mandated arranger Standard Chartered has confirmed that syndication of the $75m one year trade financing for Bank of Ceylon is progressing well, but slowly. The deal is expected to close marginally oversubscribed next week.
  • The City of Moscow kicked off its roadshow in London yesterday (Thursday), headed by the city's phlegmatic debt committee chairman, Sergey Pakhomov. Speaking at a press conference, Pakhomov immodestly pointed to Moscow's credentials as a quasi-sovereign credit. "We are the biggest Russian sub-sovereign entity by population," he said.
  • The Eu2.4bn credit backing the acquisition of Irish fixed line telephony group Eircom by Valentia Telecommunications was launched late on Tuesday, following the announcement on Monday that Valentia had received acceptances for 84% of Eircom's shares. Mandated arrangers of the loan are Allied Irish Banks, Bank of Ireland, Barclays, Deutsche Bank (joint bookrunner) and Goldman Sachs (joint bookrunner).