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  • A catering company introduced the US financial markets to a new product last month when it launched an innovative combined debt-equity offering.
  • ANZ Banking Group's purchase of The National Bank of New Zealand was the largest trans-Tasman transaction yet, the largest New Zealand M&A deal and involved the largest Australian rights issue ever, at A$3.6 billion ($2.68 billion).
  • The first mortgage-backed bond issue under the new securitization law in Greece has put in place a template for future deals.
  • Germany: once more a source of true-sale deals in Europe Deutsche Bank completed Germany's inaugural true-sale commercial mortgage-backed securitization in December, the first deal to take advantage of legislative changes that came into force during the summer.
  • It was the second week of December when the Dow Jones Industrial Average closed above 10,000 for the first time in 18 months. The number itself may not bear gifts, but breaking the psychological barrier was as an early Christmas present for the markets.
  • Two initial public offerings (IPOs) in December underlined both the continuing success of Chinese companies and the returning appetite among US investors for foreign equity. Both also saw welcome mandates for the China branches of several US and UK law firms.
  • The Hague: Dutch utilities are turning to private finance A €400 million financing in The Hague has introduced the Dutch equivalent of private finance initiative deals to the country's utilities.
  • France's national savings bank fund has issued the first tier one issue under the country's new financial securities law.
  • Morgan Stanley has overturned the scepticism of rating agencies by securitizing commercial mortgages in Belgium, France and Ireland in a true-sale deal.
  • Two prominent US law firms may have committed legal malpractice in their representation of Enron on dozens of off-balance-sheet financing transactions, according to a report released by a court-appointed examiner.