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  • ABN Amro got the size and pricing it was after with its first dollar print of 2016, amid choppy market conditions.
  • Spencer Lake to leave HSBC - UniCredit names new Americas head - Nomura hires from GS for levfin
  • Pricing is growing tight in the European leveraged loan market — very tight. Investors are moaning, but they will receive little sympathy from buyers of other asset classes.
  • Austrian gaming company Novomatic joined a surge of issuance this Tuesday as it issued a €500m no-grow bond that pulled in interest from across Europe.
  • This was the week the European high yield bond market had been hoping for: five days doing deals for single-B rated sponsor-led mergers, double-B grade corporate acquisitions and pure reverse Yankees, the perfect showcase of its funding abilities after half a year spent amid short spasms of limited issuance.
  • Australia on Tuesday announced its intention to issue its first 30 year government bond. After a summer of downgrade threats for the triple-A rated sovereign, it hopes to tempt overseas investors back into its bonds with offers of juicy yields. But market experts are not convinced it will work, writes Silas Brown.
  • CEE
    Global Ports reopened the market for Russian issuers on Thursday with a seven year dollar deal that drew both plaudits and criticism from rival bankers.
  • Telenor sold $1.5bn of shares in VimpelCom, the Russian telecoms company, this week, in a combined equity placing and exchangeable bond that were well received, despite the Uzbek bribery scandal that engulfed both companies last year.
  • The decision of buyside participants in credit and equity markets to remove near term hedges in favour of end-of-year trades has been called into question this week, with volatility picking up after the the summer lull and several potential catalysts for further upset looming next week.
  • The Chicago Board Options Exchange plans to launch options trading on the FTSE Emerging Index next week, offering market participants exposure to the performance of large and mid-cap companies from advanced and secondary emerging markets.
  • Bayer clinched a $66bn agreement to buy Monsanto this week, forming a global leader in farming technology and promising a shower of capital markets transactions that will test debt and equity markets — but may also delight them.
  • The European Union’s ‘State of the Union’ announcements on Wednesday promised more progress on Capital Markets Union, a project blown off course by the resignation of the commissioner in charge of the project, the UK’s Jonathan Hill, following the Brexit vote. Several of the early initiatives in the project are now bogged down in the European Parliament.