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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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Renault, the French car maker, issued on Monday its first bond since taking a €5bn state-backed loan. Investors piled into the deal.
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Asia’s primary bond market started on a slow note on Monday, surprising debt bankers who were gearing up for strong deal flow. But recent announcements from the US over China investment, coupled with rising US Treasury yields and a default in the Mainland bond market, have given issuers some pause.
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Government-backed Chinese issuers Shandong Hi-Speed Group Co, Wuhan Trading Group and a local government financing vehicle from Xi’an ventured to the offshore dollar bond market on Thursday. They raised a combined $880m.
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Sterling supply in high yield and leveraged loans has proved a rare sight since the 2016 Brexit vote, with UK-based borrowers preferring to seek euro funding where possible. But this week saw four deals in the currency — a relative bonanza.
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The Covid casino has produced winners and losers among Europe’s high yield gaming firms, with lottery firm Sazka securing a fat equity cheque from Apollo, while Codere has some worried that its restructuring, wrapped up in October, did too little to cut its debt burden.
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Thames Water’s holding company launched a sub-investment grade bond and tender offer to push out its 2022 maturity, announcing the new bond as markets firmed up on Monday.