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  • Goldman Sachs is prepping a single asset deal backed by part of a $1.2bn financing package on New York office building One Worldwide Plaza, according to sources. But while New York office collateral has formed the bedrock of SASB issuance this year, investors could soon start running up against concentration limits, according to one originator.
  • A euro and sterling deal from Verizon was the only corporate bond deal in the pipeline when bankers returned to their desks on Monday morning.
  • French food supplier Danone achieved what is believed to be the most tightly priced corporate hybrid capital issue ever on Monday.
  • The prospect of Greek banks issuing tier two capital early next year was heightened this week after two more of the country's big four institutions successfully printed covered bonds, writes Bill Thornhill.
  • RBC Capital Markets has hired a former Nomura banker to run its M&A business in Germany, Austria and Switzerland.
  • Corporate issuers returning from results blackout wasted no time in wading back into the bond market this week, and with investors confident in predictions that the European Central Bank would not spring a nasty pre-Halloween surprise, the result was a series of blow-out books, jumbo deals and tight pricing. Nigel Owen reports.
  • The Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) has proposed clarifications to the matching adjustment (MA) in Solvency II, which helps UK insurers invest in long term assets.
  • The dollar market sprung back to life as US banks dominated supply this week, with Goldman Sachs and Citigroup taking home more than $11bn through self-led trades.
  • SSA
    The European Central Bank has announced a reduction to the pace of its quantitative easing programme, conforming to the expectations of analysts and likely avoiding any major dislocation in eurozone spreads.
  • Marketplace loan ABS investors are showing a higher tolerance for risk, flocking to recent marketplace loan securitizations which are increasingly backed by a higher proportion of risky loans and structured with deeper capital stacks.
  • The SEC has extended a temporary olive branch to Europe in the form of a no-action relief statement, allowing US broker dealers to receive research payments from European money managers and advisory clients.
  • Companies planning to float in the UK will no longer be able to meet analysts from banks that want to manage their IPOs, under new rules published by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) this week.