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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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India’s NTPC sold its first dollar bond in two years on Monday, but the market backdrop forced the usually popular issuer to pay up.
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Four Asian issuers began marketing dollar deals on Monday, as a number of others started testing buy-side appetite through roadshows. But borrowers will have to temper their expectations on size and price, faced with a choppy market backdrop.
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China Eastern Airlines Corp has raised ¥50bn ($468m) in Tokyo’s Pro-Bond market, breaking new ground in Japan with a standby letter of credit (SBLC) structure. Some bankers reckon the deal could be the first of many to come.
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Taizhou Huaxin Pharmaceutical Investment Co executed a club-style deal on Thursday, raising $150m from a three year bond. It wasn’t the only Chinese firm wooing the buy-side. State-owned Tewoo Group opted for a perpetual deal, while Shimao Property Holdings tapped the offshore renminbi (CNH) market for the first time.
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Secondary trading platforms for non-performing Schuldscheine provide a compelling answer to some fundamental questions often levelled at the market — and observers should follow their developments enthusiastically.
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The Euro private placement market might lose some of its smaller borrowers to crowdfunding and technology platforms that offer low cost, speedy loans, market participants observe. But not all in the Euro PP market are gloomy about it.