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  • FIG
    On the surface, stress tests seem arcane and disconnected from reality. Perhaps they are, but they’re an increasingly important tool for bank regulators around the world.
  • EM bankers and investors were on Thursday underwhelmed by the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries' (OPEC) agreement to cut oil production for the first time in nearly eight years. But they said it was a positive that the price of Brent crude oil had seemingly found a floor.
  • Pulp and paper producer Suzano has sold its second green bond and the first in Brazil’s domestic markets.
  • Garanti saw the syndicate for its latest one year loan shrink by five lenders. Other Turkish banks will have to take note as smaller lending groups are set to become a feature of their borrowing, according to the head of financial institutions at the bank.
  • Service station operator MRH tightened guidance on its £250m sterling term loan this week, with commitments on the deal due alongside several others on Thursday.
  • Italy’s Mediobanca is adapting its approach and preparing for European expansion, following a hiring spree in its corporate finance division, writes David Rothnie.
  • Aegon was marketing a seven year senior bond on Thursday, joining a host of insurers taking advantage of tight funding levels to refinance at attractive costs.
  • CEE
    Russian gas processing and petrochemicals company Sibur is offering to buy back for cash some of its dollar bonds maturing January 2018, the company announced on Thursday.
  • I’ve long been suspicious of how much time bankers these days spend on their phones, but I’ve always given them the benefit of the doubt. It’s a 24-seven world now, after all. But a recent episode made me think I may have given bankers too much credit.
  • Lifestyle International, which operates the Sogo department stores, is believed to be talking to relationship banks for a loan related to its acquisition of a plot of land in Hong Kong. But the company’s downgrade by Fitch and the possibility of similar action by Moody’s could make things harder at the negotiating table, writes Shruti Chaturvedi.
  • Chinese companies have aggressively expanded into Europe this year, snapping up businesses and expanding their footprint. While loans are still the go-to funding tool and often get the bulk of the refinancing, as this week’s China National Chemical Corp transaction shows, the bridge-to bond route is becoming more popular. Morgan Davis and Addison Gong report.
  • China put the brakes on capital outflows again this week, taking aim at both large and small scale transactions amid a falling renminbi. Market participants are digesting the impact of the new curbs, as yet unconfirmed, but some thought that they could weed out dodgy deals and raise the quality of M&A financing. John Loh and Shruti Chaturvedi report.