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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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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.
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Highly valued companies that are yet to make any money are enjoying a strong reception in the US high yield market. WeWork and Netflix were the latest to sell bonds this week, despite questions over WeWork’s accounting, which turned a $933m loss into $233m of earnings. David Bell reports.