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  • Clifford Chance promoted Paul Greenwell and Angela Krantz to counsel in the firm's Tokyo office. Greenwell specializes in asset and structured finance and focuses on the aviation sector. He joined Clifford Chance's Tokyo office in 2001. Angela Krantz has been a lawyer in Tokyo for nine years and specializes in advising both Japanese and non-Japanese clients on corporate and commercial transactions. Her practice is centred on M&A, private equity and joint ventures. Before joining Clifford Chance in June 2004 she was with Morrison & Foerster in Tokyo.
  • Allen & Overy represented HBOS on the formation of its pan-European property fund. The fund is seeded with €600 million in debt and equity from HBOS and is believed to be the first big investment fund for pan-European property designed to be listed with the features of a conventional real-estate investment trust. Allen & Overy partners Ian Powell and Sanjeev Dhuna led the firm's banking team, while partners Robert Porter and John Goodhall led the fund establishment side. Derek McDonald and Dino Unni led the transaction at HBOS.
  • Recent foreign exchange regulations inadvertently dampen foreign investment in China. Filip Moerman, Niping Wu and Bian Hao explain
  • This month's cover story explains why the House of Lords' decision in Spectrum Plus is bad news for banks. The ruling by the UK's highest court renders obsolete the fixed charge used by banks as a standard form of security agreement for book debts. This has effectively removed banks' right to jump to the front of the queue to recover the money when a company becomes insolvent. Banks will now have to join the same queue as preferential creditors such as company employees, the Inland Revenue or, potentially, secured bondholders to recover their money. Despite the disappointment for lenders, at least some of the confusion over priority of payments is now resolved and the 550 or so insolvency proceedings delayed by the case can now continue. Going forward, banks may seek to more thoroughly structure their lending or seek explicit guarantees from companies over debenture lending. Geoffrey Yeowart's article on page 19 explains the ramifications of the decision for commercial banks and argues that clarification is needed on precisely how much control a lender must have over a receivable to characterize a charge as fixed rather than floating. The lack of clarification could lead banks to protect themselves by lending through special purpose vehicles, potentially raising borrowing costs. A lack of clarification is also causing problems for lawyers in Asia, specifically corporate and private equity lawyers advising funds on investing in China. Two opaque regulatory statements from the Chinese government are bringing private equity investments to a standstill due to fears that traditional exit strategies through offshore vehicles might no longer be legal. Filip Moerman and colleagues comment on page 13 that, although the State Administration of Foreign Exchange's attempts to stop Chinese residents offshoring capital and state assets are understandable, the market needs more detail on how to operate the new system or genuine foreign investment in Chinese companies might dry up.
  • Elena Tsohou, Maria Tzavelakou, Spyridoula Megalokonomou, Irini Kefaloyanni and George Pergamalis of Norton Rose outline some of the issues of trading on the Greek capital markets
  • Following the lead of the UK, France, Spain, the Netherlands, Italy and the US, Greece has introduced draft legislation to enable public-private partnerships. By Harris Ikonomopoulos of Ikonomopoulos & Partners
  • Linklaters advised ING Bank on the establishment of its €40 billion global-issuance programme. The new programme consolidates ING Bank's previous note issuance and is structured to comply with the EU Prospectus Directive. The programme allows ING to issue a variety of securities: MTNs, share-linked notes, index-linked notes, exchangeable notes, inflation-linked notes, fund-linked notes, credit-linked notes and warrants. The Linklaters team was led by partner Richard Levy. Loyens & Loeff advised on Dutch taxation matters.
  • Michael Parshall and Jonathan Swain explain how a Takeovers Panel decision in Australia is set to force disclosure of cash-settled equity swaps in some M&A transactions
  • The government of India has launched Phase II of providing FM radio services for 336 broadcasting stations across 90 cities. To encourage private FM industry, the government of India has permitted players to migrate from the current licence fee structure to a 4% revenue-sharing regime. New participants would pay a one-time entry fee through a closed bidding process.
  • Louisa Gault explains how taking security in true-sale securitizations is set to improve in Germany