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  • When, last September, Société Générale and Bankinter launched the first tranche of an asset-backed deal for four universities in the region of Valencia, it was seen as prising open a new realm of opportunities for the Spanish capital market.
  • WITH A POPULATION OF JUST 3.5M AND relatively small pools of assets, Ireland is unlikely ever to figure in the centre of international asset backed buyers' radar screens.
  • ITALY IS THE ONLY SUBSTANTIAL ASSET backed market in Europe which still has no law or regulatory framework governing securitisation. That fact does much to explain the relatively small volume of issuance - 1.5% of European term deals in 1997, according to Moody's Investors Service.
  • In the Spanish bullring it is usually the Matador that does the killing, the word being derived from matar (meaning, to kill). In the new realities of Emu, most bankers in Madrid believe, Spain's Matador foreign bond market itself is already terminally wounded.
  • Latin American sovereign borrowers have been quick off the mark in tapping the euro sector, spotting the opportunity to build full yield curves in a new currency market and to establish a pan-European investor base.
  • This article introduces a new type of recombining derivative pricing, called the willow tree, as an alternative to standard binomial and trinomial trees.
  • SRI
    LIKE SEVERAL ITALIAN CORPORATES, THE country's export credit agency, the Sezione Speciale per l'Assicurazione del Credito all'Esportazione, has also used securitisation to raise funds at a rating above its own assumed level - in SACE's case, that of the sovereign.
  • JILLIN Oil and Worldbest Kama Machinery are preparing an assault on the China B-share market in the coming weeks even though the sector has not been conducive to new issuance this year. So far in 1998 a number of B-share deals, including Shanghai Municipal Electric Power, have been pulled due to a lack of interest and exceptionally low valuations.
  • * Bankers continued to pitch for 12 privatisation mandates from the Indonesian government in Singapore this week. The government * fearing for bankers safety following the events of last week * declined to relocate the bidding exercise to Jakarta. One senior banker said: "This is investment banking at its worst. Everyone who is making a pitch realises there is no way a deal could get done in the next few months."
  • * US monoline insurer FSA and Japan's largest property and casualty insurance company Tokio Marine and Fire this week launched a joint venture to provide financial guarantees for asset backed and structured deals in Japan. The venture will not involve joint employees or name recognition -- FSA will guarantee offshore deals, while Tokio Marine wraps domestic transactions -- but each company will reinsure the other and they will share expertise.
  • DESPITE the uncertainty surrounding India's economy following the imposition of sanctions after the country's nuclear tests, the government appears determined to accelerate its financial liberalisation and privatisation process. It is poised to divest 30% of Nalco, the mining company, and may also change regulations which would allow a number of companies * including Hyundai Motor India * to list overseas for the first time.
  • Market commentary Compiled by Enrico Massi, RBC DS Global Markets, London. Tel: +44 171-865 1759