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Deal rules and slow primary market make ramping up deals difficult
◆ Supranationals and agencies prepare to achieve the previously unthinkable ◆ Leveraged loans versus private credit and their effect on CLOs ◆ A new dawn for dollar covered bonds and UK equity market structure
◆ Schaeffler attracts €5.8bn peak book… ◆ …while SPIE finds €2.8bn of orders ◆ Strong demand allows for strong price moves
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China’s Wolong Electric Group has closed its €150m debut offshore borrowing with 14 lenders.
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Sirius Minerals is in big trouble, and that means big losses ahead for the mainly retail investor base, who saw their shares dive 50% on Tuesday morning. Since the crisis, regulators have strained every nerve to keep complex, risky products out of retail hands — while retail investors have merrily piled into loss-making tech stocks and cryptocurrencies, and gambled on extractive industries. How much protection do they need?
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Shares in fertilizer miner Sirius Minerals plummeted as much as 60% on Tuesday morning after the company was forced to finally pull a $500m high yield bond offering it had postponed in August.
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Socam Development, part of the Shui On Group, became a victim of a weak market backdrop this week, pulling a planned dollar bond after investors balked at its pricing expectations. Addison Gong reports.
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French telecommunications company Altice France added another €1bn to its bond package, taking advantage of the historically issuer-friendly market conditions. The tranches were finalised after the European Central Bank announced a new round of stimulus, pushing down bond yields across the board.
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Global Cloud Xchange (GCX), a subsidiary of India’s Reliance Communications, has filed for bankruptcy protection with a US court, and plans to carry out a potential debt-to-equity swap that could reduce its bond debt by $150m.
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