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Spreads are back at pre-Iran war levels, but still offer a premium to western Europe
The company is expanding outside Turkey, such as into Saudi Arabia
Turkey's central bank increased inflation forecasts on Thursday due to rising energy prices
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It’s been a turbulent summer in emerging markets, but borrowers in the Middle East in particular are already eyeing their return to the market.
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Lenders working on Turkish bank syndicated loans say deals are still going ahead, and any suggestion that the country’s woes have postponed the active deals are just rumours.
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New US sanctions announcements on Russia, chatter around new IMF financing for Angola and a desperate economic recovery plan in Venezuela are keeping those emerging market portfolio managers still at their desks busy. But low volumes are playing havoc with EM secondary levels as traders embrace the quietest trading week of the summer.
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Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has frequently used FX and equity market investors as straw men on which to blame Turkey’s economic woes, rather than his own government’s economic mismanagement, a claim given veracity now by the petulant tweeting of US president Donald Trump.
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MegaFon has secured Rb15bn ($222m) in loans from Gazprombank, as Russia’s second largest phone company builds a financial war chest to become the country’s latest company to delist from the London Stock Exchange.
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Amid the chaos in Turkey, bankers are pitching bond buy-back opportunities to the country's beleaguered banks. Many argue that those in a position to take them up should be looked upon favourably by investors. The problem is, those investors might not even notice.