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  • KfW was able to increase from its original size target and tighten pricing on Tuesday with the first public sector dollar bond of over $1bn since the election of Donald Trump as US president.
  • Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena’s debt-for-equity swap is the bank resolution and recovery directive (BRRD) working in practice. Bondholders have no escape.
  • On Wednesday the European Commission will propose creating a new asset class of 'non-preferred' senior debt for EU banks, as part of the implementation of Basel's total Loss absorbing capacity (TLAC) standard into EU law.
  • ABS
    Zopa’s application for a banking licence is a clear vindication of a long-recognisable trend — as online lending platforms mature, they look to adopt the traditional models that they once appeared to shun.
  • Shares in Banco Sabadell, the Spanish banking group, fell 6% on Tuesday morning after Colombian billionaire Jaime Gilinski sold part of his stake for €202m through an accelerated bookbuild led by Deutsche Bank.
  • Several slated buyout transactions now have loans in the market, yet few investors are upbeat on the immediate prospects for a return to higher yields and fairer values.
  • SP Mortgage Bank, the newly established Finnish lender, successfully issued its first covered bond on Tuesday. The defensive five year maturity, which has not been seen from a core European issuer in over five months, went a long way to assuaging investors’ broader market anxieties.
  • That the Canadian finance minister has had to explain that the UK is behind the US, European Union and China in line for trade talks is not only bad news for the UK economy and the politicians in charge of it. It also highlights how 'post-truth' politics — or, in common parlance, lying — is set to play havoc with issuers’ funding plans.
  • Shares in Dometic Group, the Swedish company that makes fridges and freezers for boats and camper vans, fell 3.6% on Tuesday morning after EQT has sold the last of its shares in the company, through an accelerated bookbuild that was covered in half an hour.
  • Turkey’s QNB Finansbank and Garanti plan to sign their second yearly loan refinancings this week, according to bankers, marking the end of a tumultuous year for Turkish bank loans.
  • Saudi Arabia's International Company for Water and Power Projects (ACWA Power) is lining up the first corporate bond from the country since the sovereign’s $17.5bn debt sale in October. The issuer has a tricky market calendar to navigate but plans to print the $1bn deal before year end, and is expected to offer a pick-up over the sovereign.
  • Chinese conglomerate Fosun has agreed to invest €174.6m of capital in Banco Comercial Português (BCP), but it is unclear whether or not the funds will go towards repaying the Portuguese bank’s contingent convertible bonds next year.