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  • As investors take shelter from the incoming Italian administration by selling the capital instruments of the country’s banks, one security outperformed this week. UniCredit’s convertible and subordinated hybrid equity-linked securities (Cashes) traded up at the beginning of the week as investors assess how likely it is that the bank will have to remove the instrument from its capital stack.
  • Diplomats from the 28 EU member states are looking for ways to scale back the ambition of a reform proposed last September by the European Commission, according to negotiation documents obtained by GlobalCapital.
  • Hong Kong-listed Beijing Enterprises Clean Energy Group (BECE) has filed for a Rmb2.8bn ($439m) issuance programme in China, paving the way for the red chip’s debut in the Panda market. Should the application go through, the issuer will sell the first perpetual bond in the asset class.
  • Europe’s top ECM syndicate bankers are becoming a little disheartened about the IPO market, having had very little to celebrate since Easter.
  • The statement that value is what someone is willing to pay has proven true in the corporate bond market in the last week. Large multi-tranche deals paid lower new issue premiums than smaller deals that came later in the week, while one deal failed to find that value point altogether. And then a €2.9bn four-tranche jumbo deal attracted a €4.35bn book, albeit with healthy premiums on all tranches.
  • CEE
    Conviction levels are low among emerging market investors with many waiting on the sidelines this week as geopolitical risk and local currency weakness persist in wreaking havoc on EM bonds.
  • Denmark’s Sydbank was able to tighten pricing by about 25bp during the sale of its first additional tier one on Wednesday, despite surfacing in very poor market conditions.
  • Republic of Latvia was on track to print its new dual tranche euro-offering on Wednesday, though soft markets meant that it was offering a 7bp-10bp new issue concession at the final spread.
  • Ghana Cocoa Board (Cocobod) has announced the winning banking consortium for its annual trade finance facility, with Chinese banks making up two of the five top slots amid increased funding from the Asian country.
  • CEE
    Bank Gospodarstwa Krajowego (BGK), Poland's state development bank, has set the reoffer spreads for its seven and 12 year euro bonds. Combined books are in excess of €800m, evenly split between the tranches.
  • Some investors are optimistic that Italy’s borrowing costs can recover following a rapid rise over the last few days as the spending plans of its likely new government came to light. But they also warned that the picture is rapidly changing — as evidenced by the apparent push-back this week by the Italian president against the proposed candidate for prime minister.
  • Global asset manager Carlyle Group has poached Credit Suisse’s most senior investment banker in Indonesia.