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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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Zhongrong International Trust managed to raise $500m this week by compensating investors for its weak fundamentals with a juicy premium over its outstanding bond. But what also helped the deal was a lack of high yield supply from China, reckon bankers.
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Credit markets showed their capacity to surprise this week, as a varied array of issuers, including high yield and emerging market companies, raised funds, even though a referendum that could lead to the first country leaving the European Union is only a week away, writes Jon Hay.
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Salini Impregilo, the Italian construction firm, sold €300m of non-callable notes on Thursday to refinance its old 2018 notes, and finance part of its acquisition of US peer Lane Industries.
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Asia’s bond markets have remained resilient despite a Federal Open Market Committee meeting this week and rising concerns about the UK referendum on European Union membership. With deal flow building up for next week, bankers said Asian issuers stand to benefit from volatility in Europe, writes Narae Kim.
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Biostime International Holdings priced its maiden international bond this week as it builds its presence in Asia's capital markets.
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As European leveraged finance markets skid towards next week's UK referendum on EU membership, French glass bottle maker Verallia this week combined bonds and loans to cut its debt costs and pay Apollo Global a dividend.