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  • The credit arms of private equity firms CVC and EQT have joined efforts to provide Paymentsense, the UK card payment services firm, with a refinancing unitranche facility — a form of financing that could increase next year.
  • BPCE and Morgan Stanley chose different currencies for their dual tranche bond issues on Tuesday, as they tested investor appetite at a late stage and difficult period in the year.
  • Since Qatar National Bank completed its acquisition of Turkey’s Finansbank this year, the acquired bank has been able to hold pricing on its annual syndicated loan steady — but most of its country’s other banks are paying more for deals this year, as lenders’ dollar funding costs have risen and the threat of downgrades hangs over Turkey.
  • CEE
    After several weeks of discussions with investors Ceska Telekomunikacni Infrastruktura (CETIN) finally hit the screens with a new bond on Tuesday – though it had to sweeten the deal with a coupon step-up – and had pulled in over €1.4bn of orders by mid-morning.
  • National Bank of Abu Dhabi has completed syndication of its $2bn loan, which was oversubscribed, and will sign it within two weeks.
  • The Islamic Development Bank is marketing a sukuk, the second Islamic bond in two weeks. The deal is expected to be priced on Wednesday.
  • IPOs in Hong Kong this year have been dominated by friends and family investors or throttled by cornerstone accounts. But the appearance of technology company Meitu could be the deal the market needs to attract foreign investors, so it can’t be allowed to slip into the ranks of mainland dominated deals.
  • Shakey’s Pizza Asia Ventures raked in Ps3.5bn ($69.3m) through a Philippines IPO on Tuesday, attracting sturdy interest from long-only funds.
  • Citi and Goldman Sachs executed a clean-up trade for SK Telecom in South Korea’s Posco on Monday, with the club deal raising W307.9bn ($261.9m).
  • K Wah Financial Services is said to be on the hunt for a HK$6bn ($773.6m) five year facility. The company was last seen in the loans market in May this year, when it sealed a HK$2.4bn borrowing.
  • The uncertainty fueled by the events of 2016 has left the markets shaken with many issuers reticent about launching new deals before the end of the year. But borrowers keen to put the year behind them should think twice about betting on 2017. With impending elections in Europe and Donald Trump’s inauguration, there is plenty that could cause markets to unravel in the first quarter.
  • Standard Chartered has outlined the next stage in its plans to cut costs and reorganise the bank in a recent memo to staff. The strategy puts relationship managers at the centre of the corporate banking team under Paul Skelton, who starts at the bank in December, but the changes are expected to lead to job cuts.