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Issuers rewarded with tight pricing
Issuance beyond 15 years could return if rates stabilise
Financial services firm Fiserv mandates dual-tranche euro trade
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The economic potential of renewable energy is awesome, and should make fossil fuels obsolete by 2050, according to a new study by Carbon Tracker. But despite the compelling cost arguments for renewables, an enormous political effort will still be needed to accelerate their adoption if disastrous climate change is to be avoided.
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US corporate bond issuance slowed to a trickle this week, due to earnings blackouts, leaving the market with $52bn of deals to show for April, a far cry from last year's $234bn at the height of coronavirus safety fundraising.
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“What gets measured gets managed,” goes an old saw popular in sustainable finance circles. If companies, investors and banks, the argument says, collect better environmental and social data, this knowledge will naturally breed improvements in performance.
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Europe’s high grade corporate bond market is set for a glut of supply as companies appear to be loosening the capex purse strings once more. The only debate is about when it will come. With cash piles at near record levels, there is little agreement about when firms will need to fund spending with fresh debt, writes Mike Turner.
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Tullow Oil is marketing a new $1.8bn senior secured bond to repay its near-term maturities and cancel its reserve-based lending facility entirely, ending the twice yearly cycle of RBL determinations that has pushed some oil explorers close to the edge since the coronavirus pandemic struck.
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Essity, a Swedish personal hygiene company, has seen pressure from Moody’s and its bonds’ cash price drift lower, after announcing a debt-funded €567m-equivalent acquisition for almost all of Colombia’s Productos Familia.
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