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  • CEE
    Slovenia took full advantage of its early market move on Thursday to secure its tightest ever spread, and what it expects to be its lowest coupon, on a new euro-denominated note.
  • Crédit Agricole Cariparma returned to the market on Thursday to complete the final leg of its 2018 funding requirement, taking advantage of the exceptionally tight spread environment while it still exists.
  • The visible deal pipeline of the European high yield bond market is expected to end the week empty, but the list of potential new borrowers keeps growing. Speciality paper manufacturer Fedrigoni is the latest.
  • Given the success of the corporate bond market's opening deals of the year, it was perhaps surprising that only one issuer came to market on Thursday, but Daimler achieved similar success to the RCI Banque Wednesday deal that it copied.
  • BNP Paribas was in the market for its second non-preferred deal of the week on Thursday, ahead of what is expected to be a busy year for the asset class.
  • Lloyds Banking Group opened books on a 30 year tier two deal in dollar market on Thursday, following Commonwealth Bank of Australia’s strong result in the same tenor the day before. The two deals began bookbuilding at the same price point, but SEC-registered Lloyds should also benefit from onshore US demand, while Reg S CBA did not.
  • At some point on Christmas Day, after I had polished off several plates of turkey with all the trimmings, six mince pies and half a Christmas pudding, I began to wonder whether or not I was living a healthy lifestyle. I decided that, yes, I probably was.
  • Standard Chartered has brought a former banker at Citi out of retirement to run its Greater China and North Asian business.
  • Tata Steel has mandated a clutch of firms to underwrite its Rp128bn ($2bn) rights offering, part of a wider fundraising by the group across the capital markets.
  • Will 2018 be yet another record year for Asia’s green bond market? The signs were good this week. Swire Properties chose the format for the region’s first dollar bond of the year. Addison Gong reports.
  • India’s qualified institutional placement (QIP), a popular equity fundraising tool, is about to get a shot in the arm after the regulator said it may be used by companies to meet their free float requirements. Listed firms could tap the market in droves over the next few years as they look to comply with the rules, writes John Loh.
  • Asia’s leveraged finance bankers started the year hopeful that volumes would pick up. However, US regulators have already undermined those hopes, blocking Ant Financial’s high-profile acquisition of local firm MoneyGram, calling into question the chances of further outbound deals from China. Shruti Chaturvedi reports.