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  • SG rehires Fleury — HSBC snatches JPM EM banker — Commerz recruits in SSA origination
  • There is a stereotype of the staid investment banker, taking himself far too seriously, as obsessed with the numbers as he is with his perfectly-coiffed haircut. But the truth is that the industry attracts its fair share of oddballs, rogues and plain old geeks.
  • With Brexit negotiations still fraught with risk, DCM and syndicate managers are already figuring out fixes to make sure that their primary markets business continues to function after the UK leaves the European Union — with the minimum disruption possible for their mainly London-based staff.
  • SSA
    A supranational dollar deal ran away with April’s top spot in BondMarker, outstripping the rest of the table by a good margin and clocking in as the third most highly rated deal of the year.
  • Interserve, the struggling support services and construction firm, has signed an £834m-equivalent three year refinancing facility, just months after it narrowly avoided breaching a covenant on its old debt.
  • ABS
    Despite some concerns over underwriting standards and weak loan originations at some auto finance companies, investors are piling into US auto ABS bonds — with rating agencies also positive on the sector.
  • JP Morgan's launch of an environmentally and socially conscious version of its EMBI index is well timed, as fund managers realise that dodgy morals can lead to shabby financial statements.
  • Daimler, the German car manufacturer, has raised more than €7bn equivalent from three different corporate bond markets within two weeks of announcing its quarterly results on April 27. The sterling market was its focus on Wednesday and it received as strong a response as it did in the other two sectors.
  • Avast, the Czech cybersecurity firm, closed a well-covered book for its IPO on Wednesday at what bookrunners said was an attractive price, but the stock traded down on its first day.
  • ZTE Corp’s travails have taken a toll on the Chinese telecommunications firm and its bank lenders, with the company seeking a waiver after a covenant breach on a $450m loan. Despite the Chinese government throwing its weight behind ZTE, smaller lenders in the syndicate are worried about the ramifications, writes Pan Yue.
  • Fundraising for private debt in Europe has slowed, but a new pan-European private debt fund from US house Muzinich targeting mid-market businesses, had raised €460m at its third close this week. The final close is expected later this year.
  • The initial public offering for Axa’s US business raised less than targeted. This prompted market debate about whether the French insurer is on track in raising cash for its acquisition of XL Group and whether it would need to raise more debt, something denied by the insurer.