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High yield investors nibble at IG names, as credit investors brace for ‘trillions’ unlocked from money market funds
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
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Swiss telecommunications group Salt Mobile was this week looking to replace most of its debt capital structure with Sfr2.085bn-equivalent (€1.8bn) of new bonds that have weaker covenants, as the high yield market overcomes a recent bout of eurozone volatility.
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A joint notice by three Chinese government regulatory bodies limiting new capacity in solar power generation has caused several offshore renewable energy bonds to tank in the secondary market.
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The political upheaval in Italy is already making US investors go cold on European risk, which could magnify the market disruption Europe is likely to face in the coming months. The effects are even changing expectations on US monetary policy.
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Telecoms firm Lebara this week pushed back a deadline to avoid breaching reporting covenants of its only bond, a high yield note under Norwegian law, leaving some market participants worried about contagion.
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A topsy-turvy market backdrop is pushing a slew of Chinese borrowers, mainly property companies, to raise funds by tapping their existing dollar bonds. Buy side interest remains, but only for the right names, writes Addison Gong.
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Jitters over Italy’s political turmoil receded slightly on Thursday, giving Asia’s stock and bond markets a bit of respite, even as talk of a trade war between China and the US reappeared.