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  • The UAE’s largest private healthcare company, NMC Healthcare, has signed a $2bn loan with a club of international banks, continuing a growing trend of Middle Eastern private companies entering the syndicated loan market.
  • Akbank has signed a $1.2bn loan to refinance a loan from last year and achieved tighter pricing than on the previous facility.
  • Clifden IOM No.1 boosted its tender offer for 2006 and 2007 vintage RMACS bonds on Monday — the RMBS series still in play in its tussle with sponsors Paratus AMC. This was closely followed by the pricing of the £400m RMAC No.1, which refinances the bonds Clifden failed to amend earlier this month.
  • Even if Napoleon probably didn’t say that he’d rather have lucky generals than good ones, it's a solid point and one that works just as well for bank chief executives. By that metric, Deutsche Bank’s John Cryan does not measure up. Still, he deserves longer to prove himself.
  • The European Central Bank’s (ECB) recent decision to cut primary market orders for the covered bond purchase programme (CBPP3) is part of a long term tapering strategy that it is set to continue, delegates at the IMN covered bond conference in London heard on Tuesday.
  • Aviva’s preference share debacle shows that there is more to capital management than getting one over on your investors.
  • The increasingly fickle and protectionist nature of the Trump administration is a new factor for IPO sellers to consider as they prepare for a busy window after Easter. Issuers may have to compromise, or risk their deals being pulled.
  • KfW was set to price a $4bn three year global at the tight end of guidance with a comfortably oversubscribed book on Tuesday. But bankers said the concession offered was a sign of a changing pricing dynamic between issuers and investors.
  • The UK government has waded into Melrose’s hostile bid for engineering firm GKN, seeking assurances from the industrial conglomerate that it plans to protect UK jobs should the deal go ahead, in the latest hurdle for the £7bn-plus debt-financed acquisition.
  • JD Sports, the UK athletic wear company, has agreed a new revolving credit facility underwritten by existing relationship banks Barclays and HSBC, to finance its $558m acquisition of the US’s Finish Line.
  • France announced on Tuesday that it will come to market for an 18 year inflation linked benchmark, making the most of a pre-Easter lull in issuance.
  • This week has not looked like anyone’s ideal opportunity for issuing corporate bonds in Europe, especially a challenging debut hybrid with a speculative grade rating. But Akelius, the Swedish housing company, saw a chance and pushed ahead.