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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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Indian solar energy producer Azure Power Energy started marketing its debut international green bond on Thursday. The deal was announced two days after another Indian energy firm, Continuum Energy Levanter, pulled its own dollar bond.
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Hungarian fertiliser group Nitrogénmuvek launched the smallest high yield bond offering of the year so far on Wednesday. But guidance suggested the borrower seeks to pocket large savings as it refinances its old 2020s.
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Single-B rated bond issuers in Asia got a major setback this week, with three debut credits pulling their planned dollar offerings. There were plenty of reasons for their failures, but bankers say the cancellations reflect a debt market transitioning from one dancing to the tune of borrowers to one being dictated by investors.
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Unilever, Eversholt Rail and Grand City Properties have all defied the season this week to bring corporate bond issues, and been rewarded with strong demand.
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Bain Capital’s Diamond, the cleaning chemicals business, had to remove a controversial restricted payment clause before printing the triple-C rated bonds of its new financial structure on Tuesday.
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Bankers speaking to GlobalCapital seemed unable to make up their minds about how the second half of the year will play out in the European high yield market. But they agreed that deals in the works for September will bring little challenge for investors.