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  • Financing activity in the Nordic region is increasing once again. Bond issuance, equity deals, M&A and direct investment all look set to increase in 2004 after a bleak period characterized more by company delistings than by fresh deals.
  • Issuers queue up as Finland prepares for recovery Kari Lautjärvi and Reija Ylönen of Hannes Snellman outline changes in the Finnish securities market during 2003
  • Norway softens laws to boost new issues Norway has updated its securities laws in an effort to increase market activity. Sverre Tyrhaug of Thommessen outlines the developments
  • Intellectual property as financial security Gabriel Lidman and Per Victor, both of Advokatfirman Cederquist, give a Swedish perspective on the value of intellectual property rights as funding tools
  • Finnish shareholders need better squeeze-out guidelines Finnish law provides little help on determining the right price for minority shares in squeeze-out procedures. By Tarja Wist and Charlotta Waselius of Waselius & Wist
  • Sweden sharpens takeover rules and listing requirements Sweden is strengthening its stockmarket regulations, explain Klaes Edhall, Jan Darlin, Charlotta Grähs and Eva Kanyuk, of Mannheimer Swartling
  • Hong Kong Mortgage Corporation (HKMC) has closed the jurisdiction's largest mortgage-backed securitization, and its first for around 18 months.
  • It emerged that the EU's Prospectus Directive, published in November, restricts non-EU issuers of equity, equity-linked or low denomination debt securities in the EU to a single regulator, with immediate effect. The Directive will permanently tie issuers to the state regulator of their next issuance in the EU. Issuers that make a wrong decision could find themselves locked into using a regulator with less experience than the company would like.
  • Implementing Basel II in the US will have far-reaching implications for credit derivatives. Conrad Bahlke and Robert Lewin explain how
  • The synthetic resecuritization market is booming, but worries remain about the regulatory treatment of many products. Paul Forrester explains