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◆ Fourth largest deal from any corporate in euros ◆ Concession needed to lock in size ◆ Marketed alongside debut Canadian dollar trade
Volumes and concessions are set to skip higher, hand in hand
◆ Safer credits prove popular in uncertain market ◆ Alliander sheds orders as it punches through fair value ◆ Argan ends near five year euro absence
Lull in dollar corporate supply supports spread levels
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The Reserve Bank of India’s recent reforms to its external commercial borrowings (ECB) policy make for a simpler and looser process for firms raising debt offshore. But the central bank has also put up new roadblocks for issuers that could drastically affect their access to capital markets.
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Asia’s offshore bond market has had a strong start to the year, moving past the doom and gloom that ended 2018. But there are already signs that the difficult conditions that defined last year may only be around the corner.
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Country Garden Holdings (CoGard) raised $1bn from a two-part deal, hitting its size goal and finding the money it needs to refinance some of its maturing debt.
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Bharat Petroleum Corp (BPCL) took advantage of the new guidelines from India’s central bank to roll out a three year bond, opting for a maturity it was previously blocked from tapping.
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Some Schuldschein arrangers are expecting that a syndicate’s distribution skills may become more important this year, as conditions across capital markets become difficult.
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US private placement (US PP) participants the world over will descend on Florida next week for four days of intensive meetings at a major market conference. For UK-based PP agents attending, soothing concerns over and gleaning investors’ views on Brexit is the top priority.