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Investment grade corporate market participants are all aware that the European Central Bank’s bond buying programme will come to an end in 2018. The pace of that buying slowed in April, but the cash that investors are holding is proving to be an easy replacement for the central bank’s support.
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China Aoyuan Property Group, Hydoo International Holding and Indonesia’s Federal International Finance wasted no time in hitting the bond market on Wednesday after the Labour Day holiday.
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Despite expectations of a slowdown in the pace of issuance in the European high yield market, two borrowers brought €2.9bn of new bonds this week. Both issuers, Spanish construction firm Aldesa and Italian banking payments group Nexi, marketed refinancing deals.
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Indonesian property company Bumi Serpong Damai returned to the debt market on Monday for a quick $50m tap to its $250m 7.25% 2021 bond that was sold last week.
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Poly Property Group and Hong Yang Group Co raised funds from the dollar bond market last Friday, with the former opting for a tap of its outstanding paper and the latter going down the short-term note route.
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The debt market in Asia ended the week on a muted note, with both investment grade and high yield dollar spreads widening amid a rise in US Treasury yields. The primary bond market was also quiet with no international issuance on Thursday and a lone Chinese issuer collecting bids on Friday.