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Structured squeeze

The Japanese credit markets have been a relative oasis of calm amid the turmoil since mid-2007. But new consumer-debt laws, coupled with concerns about the Bear Stearns bailout, are casting a pall over the securitisation sector. By Kathleen Kearney

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The structured credit market in Japan, estimated at Yen9 trillion ($90 billion) in 2007 by Fitch Ratings, looked far more stable than any other major credit market at the start of 2008. While total issuance fell in 2007 by 7%, according to Fitch estimates, there was talk of the possibility of growth in some product categories this year, albeit in simple structures with low leverage based on solid

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