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Disruptive US economic policy has not yet dented credit appetite
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
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It was high yield that sprung back to life in Asia this week, while investment grade counterparts remained on the sidelines amid a cautious environment. Market participants remain hopeful that the region’s high yield market will benefit from a possible Brexit-driven pivot from European investors, write Narae Kim and Max Bower.
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The list of Chinese real estate firms seeking to take advantage of the country’s Panda bond market is getting longer, with Agile Property Holdings the latest to have its application approved.
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State Bank of India and JSW Steel have set sights on the offshore bond market, announcing their respective fundraising plans on the stock exchange.
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In the week after the UK’s vote to leave the European Union many corporate bond specialists are feeling downbeat. But away from existential questions about the City’s future, the investment grade corporate bond market is actually in fairly good shape.
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Citic Envirotech has priced a $180m tap of its existing $175m 5.45% perpetual notes at the tighter margin of 4.25%, becoming the first Asian G3 bond issuer since the UK’s decision last Friday to leave the European Union.
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US, German and French bankers speaking to GlobalCapital from the control room of the European high yield market want London to keep their capital. But they admit it is a hopeless wish, if Brussels imposes a full Brexit.