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Embattled utility makes final plea for court to sanction £3bn in emergency funding
Thames Water refinancing battle is an unedifying mess
Embattled utility asks judge to approve £3bn lifeline as creditor groups keep fighting
High yield issuers may be worried about market access, but some do not see them losing it
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  • Telecoms firm Lebara is seeking further changes in its bond terms, including waivers on leverage covenants and a shorter maturity date, after it finally released group financial results which have been delayed since February.
  • Sustainability is conquering finance — to judge by what the industry likes to talk about. Outside the window, the real economy continues much as before. Is all the noise about green finance actually shifting capital in the right direction — or is it just making people feel better?
  • SSA
    London has peaked as Europe’s capital markets hub. But how much of the business it will lose is still to play for. Bankers’ faith that only some functions need go looks misplaced. The stage is set for a drawn-out poker game between banks wanting to stay in London and continental regulators who hold a strong hand.
  • Pain from Brexit, higher interest rates, quantitative easing ending and political strains in the EU will all lead to more volatility in 2019, according to 22 heads of debt capital markets in the EMEA market, including 18 of the top 20, in Toby Fildes’ annual outlook survey. And that’s before Donald Trump, Vladimir Putin and Mohammed bin Salman get going. There is some good news, however: financial institutions are set to be big issuers, and the DCM heads expect to be net hirers...
  • Bonds issued by China’s Kangde Xin Composite Material Group plummeted in the secondary market on Monday, losing around a third of their value after rumours of an onshore default.
  • Zhengzhou Metro Group became the latest Chinese local government financing vehicle (LGFV) to price a dollar bond, turning to the market on the same day two issuers in Chengdu and Yichang also raised funds.