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  • How Fischer’s plans fell apart at WestLB
  • Corporate market emerges from intensive care.
  • Pfandbrief issuers were notable by their absence as the covered bond market descended into chaos.
  • Write-downs in the leveraged loan market can raise more questions than they answer.
  • Opportunities are growing for distressed debt and equity investors in the region despite record levels of private equity fundraising.
  • After the crash, here comes CASH
  • The credit crunch has made life especially difficult for the credit portfolio managers charged with hedging commercial banks’ massive corporate loan portfolios. Lack of liquidity in credit default swaps and the closure of the CLO market has greatly reduced their arsenal of hedging tools. It’s not all bad news though. Wild market conditions have underscored the importance of actively hedging loan books and served to justify portfolio management groups’ existence to banks’ top management.
  • It’s not often that you can walk onto a trading floor and are greeted by England cricket legend Mike Atherton, twinkle toes Mark Ramprakash, champion jockey Frankie Dettori and Olympics silver medallist boxer Amir Khan.
  • A senior Citi official in Latin America says that Brazil’s leading local banks will remain independent despite rumours that foreign banks, including Citi itself, could be sizing up a potential acquisition. One banker in São Paulo told Euromoney recently that he reckoned that Brazil’s three big local banks – Bradesco, Itaú and Unibanco – could become targets for global banks, such as Citi, as they bid to increase their presence in Latin America’s most important market.
  • Firms rushing to set up credit opportunity funds might already be too late.
  • The world’s stock and futures exchanges have benefited handsomely from equity market uncertainty.
  • Leading players in Argentine capital markets say the government must issue a trailblazing Eurobond or global bond if the markets are to take off. The country’s financial markets are more than 20 times smaller than those of Brazil, despite Brazil’s GDP ($1.17 trillion) being less than five times greater than Argentina’s ($250 billion).