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Book to open on Monday, close on Thursday in latest express IPO
A handful of large new listings have emerged from South Africa, Kenya and Angola and more are set to follow
Submarine mast maker's IPO raised €132.8m
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Investment bankers serving Europe’s financial institutions are already confident 2017 is going to prove a more fruitful year than 2016, when the fees paid by the sector fell to a 14 year low, writes Jon Hay.
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The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) will let banks buy shares in real estate and infrastructure investment trusts (Reits and InvITs), removing one of the last hurdles for an asset class that has struggled to get off the ground for years. But some market participants still have doubts, warning that the debut deal will not come swiftly. John Loh reports.
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South Korean ECM got a treat this week, with Netmarble Games opening books on Tuesday for what is set to be the country’s largest IPO of the year, with the deal fully covered by the first day. The listing marks a strong start for South Korea, which will move to the top of the region’s 2017 league tables when the trade wraps up, writes Jonathan Breen.
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India’s divestment body has sent out requests for proposals seeking firms to run divestments in a host of companies from the energy sector to shipbuilding and weapons manufacturing.
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A fresh IPO launch broke the quiet in the pre-Easter European equity capital market this week: and a very unusual one — the first Romanian flotation of the year. Digi Communications, a leading telecoms and media group, wants to float 25% of its equity in Bucharest.
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Hong Kong’s market regulator has laid out its approach for the listing of infrastructure project companies, addressing potential risks from IPOs in the sector.