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  • US banks coming out of earnings blackouts have provided all the fare in FIG so far this week, and the trend continued Wednesday as Goldman Sachs and Bank of America hit the euro senior unsecured markets. And though primary market activity is subdued, those deals that are coming are ballooning with pent-up demand.
  • Kazakhstani crude oil company Tengizchevroil (TCO) has released price guidance for its $1bn 10 year bond at 300bp over US Treasuries, a level that one analyst called fair.
  • Qatar's Commercial Bank has signed a $166m loan from a group of Asian lenders, mostly Japanese, extending a trend of Middle Eastern borrowers heading east for cash.
  • FIG
    US banks seemed to have been saved by the Brexit. Though profits fell at a handful, nearly all of the big hitters that have reported so far have beaten analyst expectations, thanks in large part to boosts in trading following the UK vote to leave the EU. That has spurred primary activity.
  • All eyes are on Turkey this week after the attempted coup in the country last weekend, but the wider CEEMEA market has continued to churn out bonds, demonstrating the asset class’s resilience to single-country events.
  • The public sector bond market is enjoying its third busy week in a row, as issuers of a varying credit quality took advantage of enviable conditions to win big books and tight pricing on a kaleidoscope of deals.
  • The Thai government has hired three local and two international banks to work on the planned Bt100bn ($2.8bn) listing of the Thailand Future Fund (TFF), which sources said is slated to hit screens next year.
  • The word of the week in corporate financing markets is Teva — except when it’s Softbank.
  • China Minmetals Corp started attracting attention from investors on Wednesday morning, taking bids for a dollar offering divided into a five and 10 year.
  • UBS has made yet more changes to its investment banking business, naming Matthew Grounds as chairman of investment banking for Asia Pacific.
  • Guangzhou Rural Commercial Bank has mandated a quartet of banks for a Hong Kong listing that could be worth around $1.5bn, according to sources familiar with the matter.
  • The Indian government is setting aside Rp229.15bn ($3.42bn) in additional funds for the 2016-2017 fiscal year to recapitalise its state-owned banks, according to a Ministry of Finance announcement.