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  • Derivative exposures currently are calculated by marking the transaction to market, applying an "add-on" to reflect the outstanding duration of the derivative and the riskiness of the underlying asset, applying the credit risk weighting of the counterparty and then reducing this total by 50%.
  • The performance of Germany's states in the international markets has been patchy, to put it mildly. Although some individual states have won plaudits for their strategies and attitudes, the pooling of the debt of several other states has not been popular.
  • On the surface, the Pfandbrief market is in buoyant health. The campaign to internationalise the product appears to have succeeded brilliantly. More and more debt is being sold to overseas investors and issue sizes are growing all the time.
  • Securitisation in Germany is starting to develop fast as banks increasingly focus on return on equity and as companies consider new financing strategies as a way of boosting shareholder value.
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  • Germany's capital market and its participants have embraced the euro with gusto, adding new momentum to a financial market which has changed out of all recognition in the last few years.
  • Big, medium or small, Germany's companies are making increased use of the bond markets as the euro opens up a new world of investors and funding opportunities. From the jumbo bonds issued by Mannesmann to the small debuts by a handful of Mittelstand companies, the trend is clear and investment banks are engaged in a major marketing drive to persuade new corporate issuers to venture into the market.
  • The swift emergence of an equity culture in Germany has been one of the most remarkable phenomena in international capital markets in recent years. From being a backwater in terms of new equity issuance, Germany has quickly become Europe's busiest primary market - fuelled by the extraordinary growth of interest in the Neuer Markt for growth companies, and by the high level of restructuring activity among major corporations.
  • Led by the commercial banks, German financial institutions have generally accepted the need to pay a higher price for their international debt this year in return for access to a global and more diversified investor base.
  • The Basle Accord was promulgated in the late 1980s in the aftermath of the sovereign debt crisis.
  • Australia Merrill Lynch and JB Were completed a rights issue for Flinders Industrial Property Trust yesterday (Thursday). A total of A$42m was raised from the deal which offered units at A$1.08 - a discount to the A$1.20 close.