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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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Four Chinese issuers hit the market with new transactions on Monday, despite the credit market ending on a weak note last week. As the companies try to make use of their remaining fundraising quotas, the focus remains on new issue premiums.
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Personal computer maker Lenovo priced a $750m deal on Thursday as part of a liability management exercise, switching some investors out of an old bond that will mature next year. But like others in the market, the borrower had to pay a double-digit new issue premium to ensure success.
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Shandong Iron & Steel Group Co and a Chinese government-owned entity from Xuzhou both took a cautious approach to their dollar bonds on Thursday in a market that has become increasingly volatile.
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Chinese technology company Tsinghua Tongfang Co hit the market on Thursday in a desperate attempt to use its offshore regulatory approved fundraising quota before it expires at the end of March. While the issuer managed to raise $300m, the transaction was a rough one.
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The traditional investment grade debt buyers that have ventured into Europe's high yield and leveraged loan markets since quantitative easing sucked much of the juice out of high grade markets are showing no sign of losing their thirst for levfin, despite the looming end of QE, writes Victor Jimenez.
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LendInvest, the UK online property finance platform, has launched the second deal of the year on the London Stock Exchange’s Order book for retail bonds. The firm is optimistic on the outlook for sterling assets in the retail and property sectors, despite the headwinds faced by some issuers this month.