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  • The central bank of Laos is seeking a $100m loan through Taipei Fubon Bank, while simultaneously syndicating another deal of the same size via Cathay United Bank.
  • China Everbright Greentech, an environmental protection service provider under China Everbright International, is testing lenders’ appetite for a HK$800m ($102m) syndicated loan.
  • Redwood Trust is preparing to issue the first private label RMBS deal of the new year.
  • No Latin American borrowers dared to announce bond plans in the short first working week of 2019, but a flurry of pre-Christmas requests for proposals and the prospect of habitual January issuers tapping was enough to make syndicate bankers chirpier.
  • El Salvador’s Congress has approved the issuance of new external debt to enable it to refinance debt due later this year. That will mean one fewer headaches for whoever wins next month’s presidential elections.
  • SSA
    A year and a half of costly insurance losses from the disasters such as the 2017 US hurricanes and last year’s wildfires in California are grinding down investors in catastrophe bonds and other insurance-linked securities. That raises questions over the direction of a market that has experienced consistent growth up to now, writes Jasper Cox.
  • Issuers are flocking to the sterling bond market ahead of the crunch vote in the UK Parliament on prime minister Theresa May’s Brexit deal, which is scheduled for January 14. Issuers are taking full advantage of a parliamentary recess and a break in the political mayhem that saw the vote, originally due to take place last month, postponed due to May's fears it would be voted down. Burhan Khadbai and Tyler Davies report.
  • Companies usually park their reserves of cash in staid, low-yielding liquid assets. But asset managers are trying to persuade them to invest some of that money differently, in a way that could help them live up to their environmental commitments.
  • Borrowers flocked to the sterling bond markets this week, at possibly greater pace than the usual January rush. Some of that seemed to be an attempt to get ahead of a crucial Brexit vote in the UK parliament later this month. But if anyone expects clarity on the UK’s future relationship with Europe after that date, they’re delusional.
  • BNP Paribas has become the first European bank to put a callable non-preferred senior deal into the public market, after opening books on a new dollar deal on Thursday.
  • All of the top five DCM banks by revenue are US houses — for the third year running — though the resurgent Barclays cracked the top five by volume this year, according to full year 2018 figures from Dealogic.
  • It is with much sadness that we have to report the death of John Lee-Tin.