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  • A HK$4.851bn ($625m) leveraged buyout financing to back the acquisition of Wharf T&T by MBK Partners and TPG Capital has closed in syndication, with 13 banks joining the leads.
  • Mexico’s Pemex put smiles on the faces of bankers and investors with a $5.5bn triple tranche bond issue on Tuesday, the first Latin American bond to be sold in the US since before the US election.
  • Ecuador, the highest yielding single B sovereign in the world, issued $750m of 10 year bonds on Thursday, becoming the second Latin American credit in a week to take advantage of the recent rally in oil, following Mexican state-owned oil giant Pemex’s $5.5bn bond.
  • Crédit Agricole announced a mandate for the first ever senior non-preferred bond on Thursday, in a move that confirmed French banks are very keen to start issuing in the format.
  • Online mortgage lender LendingHome has launched a master trust as part of its plan to become a regular issuer in the securitization market, capital markets vice president Paul Stockamore told GlobalCapital.
  • FIG
    Goldman Sachs printed a $3bn trade on Thursday to push dollar FIG issuance to an all-time high.
  • The City of London is "vanishing from the Union’s conversations", according to an MEP from the group of 12 who are scrutinising Brexit negotiations. That suggests preserving London as the financial centre of Europe will not be on the agenda for the EU side in the talks. UK ministers met City representatives this week, but what they offered was "of little use", according to sources at the meeting.
  • European corporate bond market participants met Thursday's unexpected European Central Bank monetary policy announcement with calm, but accepted the impact of Thursday’s decisions may be a slow burner.
  • The true effect of the final European Central Bank governing council meeting of the year may not be known for weeks, with many in the market in disagreement over just how dovish it was. But one more tangible suggestion is that public sector borrowers will face steepened euro curves in the new year, writes Craig McGlashan.
  • It doesn’t take a genius to work out that Greece needs real debt relief if it is ever to return to stability, nor that European leaders are afraid of providing it ahead of a busy election calendar for next year.
  • Credit Suisse updated the market on the progress of its strategic turnaround on Wednesday, lowering its revenue targets and stepping up its cost cutting. The majority of the additional cost cutting will hit global markets, while in investment banking it has already cut down its reliance on leveraged finance.
  • Banca Monte dei Paschi, and all involved in attempts to recapitalise it, are waiting for decisions from the European Central Bank, which will determine how its €5bn equity raising proceeds.