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  • Steinhoff’s multi-billion euro equivalent debt restructuring saga took another step forward this week, with the company receiving High Court approval to press on with a scheme of arrangement related to its US subsidiary Mattress Firm.
  • CEE
    Russian giant Gazprom and Ukrainian oil and gas firm Naftogaz, who have been locking horns in court, both chose Tuesday to release price guidance for new Eurobonds. The Gazprom deal will be the first public international bond from a Russian issuer since the US sanctions that shook the market in April. The Naftogaz bond is its first since 2009.
  • In a further sign that the European leveraged loan market is approaching the end of the year on a hot note, trading software provider OpenLink is looking to reduce the spread on the leveraged buyout loans it sold in March.
  • Kazatomprom, the world’s largest producer of natural uranium, priced a $451m IPO this week with a strong, but concentrated, book backing the deal.
  • CEE
    CEZ, a Czech utility company, came to market for four year euros on Tuesday, returning to the currency for its largest deal since 2013.
  • SRI
    Camp Fire is the most destructive wildfire in California’s history and the latest sign that insurers in the state are facing a recurring threat from blazes. Within the catastrophe bond market, the recent events have focused minds on insurance losses as usual, but also on the utility companies that have issued securities to cover their liability for losses.
  • European regulators and the UK’s Financial Conduct Authority have hit back against what they see as on overly restrictive interpretation of the European PRIIPs rules, intended for structured products. The rules, which came in in January this year, have led some issuers of vanilla bonds to hold back from offering these to retail clients because they were worried about new documents required.
  • Nigeria hit screens on Monday afternoon to announce a roadshow for a triple tranche dollar bond, confirming rumours of a planned capital markets return that began circulating last week.
  • Banca Carige announced its capital recovery plan on Monday, relying on friends and family to help it keep going. Italian banks have agreed to support it with €320m though the interbank deposit protection fund (FITD), and it will also be looking to existing shareholders.
  • Mizuho has put in place a replacement for Farris Mellor, director of loan sales, EMEA syndications, who left the bank in August. The hire squashes fears that the bank may have been looking to use Mellor’s departure as an opportunity to reduce the team headcount.
  • DBS has made several senior staff moves ahead of the retirement of Jeanette Wong, group head of institutional banking (IBG), next March.
  • Two Hong Kong IPO hopefuls have taken different approaches to their transactions. Tencent-backed Tongcheng-Elong Holdings launched its smaller listing of up to HK$1.8bn ($232.4m) on Tuesday, while Babytree has put its planned float on hold.