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  • Global mining firm MMG, whose largest shareholder is China Minmetals Corp, has proposed a rights issue of over 2.5bn new shares in a move to raise HK$4.0bn ($515.8m).
  • A subsidiary of Chinese electro-acoustic product maker Goertek has approached banks for a $150m three year borrowing.
  • State-owned China Nuclear Engineering Group Co (CNEC) has hired banks to test appetite for its inaugural CNH bond — the third time it is attempting to sell a dim sum deal.
  • JP Morgan is working with US regulators to resolve probes into its hiring practices in Asia, years after investigators were reported to be looking into whether it hired the children of Chinese officials in Hong Kong to win business.
  • Hong Kong’s IPO sponsors are in the spotlight for all the wrong reasons as Standard Chartered and UBS face investigations by the city’s regulator. As a former IPO banker and joint author of the study manual for sponsors, our columnist Clawback is perfectly placed to delve into the pitfalls for banks.
  • The Dubai Gold and Commodities Exchange (DGCX) has announced plans to launch a renminbi futures contract, with Gaurang Desai, CEO of the exchange, telling GlobalRMB the contract has already received regulatory approval.
  • The IFC’s new 'forests bond' has much to recommend it, but like so many other green investments, its main value lies in publicity, not purely in financing.
  • AP Møller-Mærsk is tonight selling its remaining 1.6% stake in Danske Bank in an accelerated bookbuild worth Dkr3.35bn (€450m) before any discount. The deal breaks a quiet patch for block trades in Europe.
  • Nissan has done the UK a favour. By playing hardball about wanting assurances from the UK government about Brexit, it has opened the debate into one where real investments are discussed, and tough choices become apparent. The City should follow its lead.
  • JP Morgan has replaced its co-heads of EM credit trading with a sole head, and has promoted two other traders to co-heads of CEEMEA credit trading.
  • Aberdeen City Council was able to raise £370m on Tuesday with a bond issue that was the first ever from a sub-sovereign Scottish borrower.
  • Bayview Asset Management caught the eye of RMBS market players by issuing the first ever deal repackaging outstanding credit risk transfer (CRT) securities issued by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac late last week.