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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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US media and entertainment company iHeartMedia filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on Thursday, adding $9.4bn of high yield bonds and $6.3bn of leveraged loans to US default volumes, although Fitch Ratings said there is ‘no widespread distress’ in the sector.
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Indonesian coal company Toba Bara Sejahtra failed to make its debut in the dollar bond market this week, after a weak market backdrop and concerns about high yield credits dented investor appetite. But other firms looking for funding are not giving up just yet, writes Morgan Davis.
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Tullow Oil, the group based in London that has most of its operations in Africa, was on course to print its new high yield bond in the 7% area this week. It was attracting interest from pension funds in need of assets with high returns, according to sources.
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Debt bankers in Asia hit a temporary pause button on Wednesday when no dollar deals were launched, as the market recovered from the overwhelming supply in recent weeks. But it was back to business on Thursday, with issuers braving rough conditions to hit the market.
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January and February, particularly the latter, were quiet months for corporate bond new issuance in Europe. However, March is lining up to be the busiest month of 2018 so far in both investment grade and high yield markets, and that is starting to worry investors.
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Greenland Holding Group Company has joined a slew of Chinese property developers issuing offshore renminbi bonds, but it left something on the table for investors to achieve a relatively large size of Rmb1.5bn ($237m).