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  • Crédit Agricole provided no let-up in the disappointing performances of fixed income, currencies and commodities (FICC) desks in French banks’ fourth quarter results. By one measure it was the lender's worst quarterly result there in more than six years.
  • UK media company Future has signed a £90m revolver and an infrastructure project is attracting continental demand, as European banks still show strong interest into sterling-denominated transactions despite the uncertainty around Brexit headed into Thursday’s parliamentary debate.
  • Vakifbank has found competitive funding with a privately placed covered bond, its second of the year, sold via sole lead manager Credit Suisse, even though the publicly syndicated Turkish covered bond market has been closed for some time.
  • Uzbekistan printed its $1bn dual tranche five and 10 year bond on Wednesday to great investor excitement, but the bubble was punctured on Thursday when both traded down in the secondary market. That was despite orders as big as $300m from one international EM account, according to Uzbekistan’s deputy prime minister and finance minister, Jamshid Kuchkarov.
  • Grŵp Cynefin, a housing association that manages properties in north Wales, has issued an inaugural sterling debt private placement.
  • CEE
    The Turkish sovereign’s third bond of the year, a sukuk, was priced with no new issue premium on Wednesday, paving the way for Türk Telekom to come to market.
  • Svenska Handelsbanken found strong demand at tight levels for a new additional tier one this week, helping to put to bed any concerns that the market might be languishing after the first ever ‘non-call’ in asset class.
  • Chinese property developer Dexin China has launched bookbuilding for an IPO that could raise up to HK$1.73bn ($220.3m).
  • CStone Pharmaceuticals has launched Hong Kong’s first biotechnology IPO of the year — and bankers are watching it closely. The up to HK$2.38bn ($304m) deal has received a strong early response, a good sign for the growing pipeline of biotech issuers hoping to put a difficult 2018 behind them. Jonathan Breen reports.
  • BBVA did not have to offer any premium to investors to bring in a new tier two bond on Thursday, according to lead managers, as asset managers show renewed thirst for debt from southern European financial institutions.
  • On Thursday, the European corporate bond market saw its second Nordic telecoms new issue of the week. Finnish company Elisa used the same no-grow strategy as its Swedish peer Telia used on Tuesday, but for a smaller deal.
  • Barclays has hired Geoffrey Horton as a CLO and loan strategist in London.