Credit Suisse
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An overnight share sale in India’s Kotak Mahindra Bank fetched Rp36.5bn ($545.6m) for ING Groep on Thursday, with the trade feted as one of the largest blocks in the country to price at a 0% discount.
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Fullerton Healthcare Corp plans to raise up to S$270.8m ($199m) in an IPO on the Singapore Exchange, launching the deal on Thursday.
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Construction equipment maker Doosan Bobcat and Netmarble Games are on track with their respective IPOs, with the former set to become the largest listing in South Korea since 2012.
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Pfandbriefbank Schweizerischer Hypothekarinstitute placed on Tuesday a dual tranche deal in Swiss francs. The shorter tranche was fashioned into a 12 year clip to entice investors looking for positive yield.
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A range of credits from India, Malaysia and Greater China stormed the Asian debt market on Thursday, vying for investor attention.
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Syndicated loans are becoming a focal point of firms looking to demonstrate the power of blockchain, or distributed ledger technology, with different initiatives ramping up and competing to solve the problem of lengthy settlement times in the private debt market.
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Bank ABC and Credit Suisse are leading the syndication of a €195.5m loan for Tunisie Telecom's acquisition of a majority holding in Maltese telecoms firm GO, according to a banker close to the deal.
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India’s Bharat Financial Inclusion, previously known as SKS Finance, has raised Rp7.5bn ($112.8m) through a highly sought after qualified institutional placement.
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Three Mexican borrowers are meeting bond investors this week as Latin American issuers continue to look to take advantage of low rates.
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Shui On Development made its return to the international bond market on Monday after almost two years, bagging $250m from a new three year unrated offering.
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McDonald’s offered a Sfr400m ($413.6m) eight year trade to the Swiss market on Monday, closing the deal with an order book exceeding Sfr1.5bn and tightening pricing by more than the lead managers had expected.
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One of the biggest Chinese bad debt managers China Cinda Asset Management sealed a $3.2bn deal last Friday, marking the country’s first AT1 from a non-bank entity. In addition, it is also the largest dollar deal from a Chinese issuer so far this year.