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LevFin CLOs

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BWICs spike and spreads widen but market remains constructive
Resets and refis prominent in pipeline as loan market softens, offering respite from repricing wave
Dasha Sobornova joins from Akin Gump with experience across asset classes
Trade body for levfin investors turns to leading rating analyst
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  • Royal Industries Indonesia, an agro-industrial company, is tapping the market for a $300m multi-tranche financing, offering generous margins of at least 400bp over dollar Libor.
  • Thai retailer CP All is refinancing a jumbo $6bn bridge loan taken in May this year, using a combination of local currency bonds and loans, as well as a US dollar loan.
  • Land Bank of Taiwan has launched BES Engineering’s NT$9.2bn ($309m) five year loan into syndication, with a margin of 147bp over the Taiwanese secondary CP rate and five participation levels up for grabs.
  • Japanese wireless carrier SoftBank Corp has signed a jumbo ¥1.98tr ($20bn) loan with a group of 19 banks, in what is the biggest syndicated loan in Asia Pacific.
  • A group of 17 banks has put in commitments for Hutchison Port Holdings’ $3.6bn self-arranged financing.
  • Asian high yield bonds made a stunning comeback this week when two blowout deals put the sector back in vogue after being widely shunned by investors since global bond markets fell into a funk in June, writes Frances Yoon. But even though the US Federal Reserve dealt a positive shock to markets on Wednesday by keeping the quantitative easing taps open, bankers are all singing the same tune — junk bonds won’t be for everybody, and investors still have their limits.