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  • Ask bankers about what most irks them in the industry today and it won't be long before they utter the word "compliance". Whenever I hear such complaints I like to trot out the following story from a very different time.
  • Bajaj Finance has set its sights on a Rp45bn ($703m) capital increase as in-demand Indian FIG issuers line up to tap equity investors.
  • Some banks will emerge from summer with a pressing need to secure new staff, but coverage gaps are taking longer to fill, writes David Rothnie.
  • FIG
    European banks are expected to call the first generation of Basel III compliant additional tier one (AT1) instruments, as a prolonged rally in the asset class has made refinancing conditions very attractive for issuers.
  • Shenzhen-listed Changjiang Securities Co is planning to list its offshore arm in Hong Kong, having gained China Securities Regulatory Commission approval.
  • Indian company Intas Pharmaceuticals is lining up banks to help it fund an acquisition in Europe and the US, turning back to lenders who helped the company pull off a successful takeover earlier this year. But this time around, it has more bargaining power. Shruti Chaturvedi reports.
  • Amazon priced the third jumbo M&A financing bond issue in a month in the US corporate bond market on Tuesday. The $16bn seven tranche package was the fourth-largest new issue of 2017, but the summer of 2017 could signal the high point of M&A related issuance for some time, writes Nigel Owen.
  • US President Donald Trump’s unexpected threat against North Korean leader Kim Jong-un last week alarmed investors, pushing down South Korean offshore bonds. But Korean issuers this week shrugged off concerns of a long-term problem and are already making plans to return to the market. Morgan Davis reports.
  • Peugeot Citroën’s joint venture in China is set to return to the China ABS market after a year away. The auto maker will offer investors only one tranche, down from the two tranches in its 2016 debut, but the deal size will triple to Rmb3bn ($449.8m).
  • Emerging markets specialist investment manager Gramercy's head of sovereign research left the firm earlier this month, GlobalCapital understands.
  • Cheung Kong Infrastructure Holdings sold a fixed-for-life hybrid bond denominated in dollars on Wednesday. The deal did not draw an overwhelming response, but market participants said overall demand for the structure is muted.
  • Indonesia’s Medco Energi Internasional has added $100m to its outstanding five non call three bonds from last week, bagging a total of $400m as Chinese investors continue to prove a receptive audience.