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Sfr4.9bn trade is largest European ECM deal since National Grid’s £7bn rights issue in 2024
Offer came as markets recovered and volatility fell
Naturgy and Zurich fall in secondary market after jumbo blocks
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Just when it seemed like calm was returning to China’s whipsawing stock market, investors were thrown another curveball on Monday, as Shanghai suffered its worst one-day plunge in eight years. While ECM desks in Hong Kong were rattled by the rout, they are not pressing the panic button.
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Central China Securities Co wrapped up a HK$2.53bn ($327m) placement on July 24, allowing its shares to resume trading on Monday after what had turned out to be a longer-than-usual bookbuilding process.
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India’s Syngene International has flung open the books to its Rp5.5bn ($86.0m) IPO, with the trade bagging anchor investors including the Monetary Authority of Singapore and Government of Singapore.
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Trading in Central China Securities Co remained suspended for a second day as bookbuilding for its HK$2.53bn ($327m) accelerated block trade, launched on July 23, went on longer than expected.
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The first Singaporean real estate investment trust (Reit) to tap the equity market since Manulife US Reit pulled its S$569m ($426m) IPO this month was welcomed by investors with open arms, as Frasers Commercial Trust priced its block trade at the top.
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The Chinese stock market’s rapid plunge into bear territory this month has brought unexpected gains for the equity capital markets of another large emerging economy — India. ECM bankers in that country have started to see a big uptick in interest from international investors eager to park their funds in a safe haven, writes Rashmi Kumar.