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US issuers and insurance companies could benefit as Moody’s relaxes parts of its approach
Investors attracted by relative value versus loans but are not blind to risk
Floridian manager registered the vehicle in Ireland with article 8 SFDR classification
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The European high yield bond market was built on telecoms companies, but in the last month their share has shrunk, as several have shored up their capital structures ahead of the heavy financial lifting set to be required for 5G infrastructure. More than €10bn of high yield bonds are likely to be repaid, leaving investors sitting on piles of cash going into September.
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Korean Air Lines Co returned to the policy bank-guarantee structure for its latest offshore bond this week, raising $300m at a favourable price.
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The local government has thrown a lifeline to Qinghai Provincial Investment Group Co, helping it pay off a dollar bond coupon a week after it was due. But more looming payment deadlines are set to cause the company a headache. Addison Gong reports.
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Finnish nuclear power company Teollisuuden Voima (TVO) got a warm reception from the investors on Wednesday, when it sold €550m of senior unsecured notes after a 20bp tightening from initial price thoughts.
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A flight to safety is underway leaving little support for the riskier bits of leveraged finance. A Finnish nuclear power company is, however, marketing a deal in the high yield bond market and one investor told GlobalCapital he expects to see others follow suit rather than tap the loan market.
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Unsecured creditors to German engineering firm Galapagos swooped in at the last minute on Friday to stop a sale of the business that would have wiped out their claims. One of the funds fighting this corner is the credit opportunities fund raised by former Deutsche Bank securitization boss Elad Shraga.