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LevFin High Yield Bonds

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  • More European corporate high yield bonds were issued in January than in the whole of the previous three months. But while some investors and analysts are putting the boom down to the European Central Bank's quantitative easing, bankers are keen to give the market more credit for inherent strength.
  • The success this week of 2015’s first high yield property bond from China has sparked talk of a post-Chinese New Year comeback for the much maligned sector. While this bodes well for the Chinese, the opposite holds true for southeast Asian issuers, which had stepped up to fill the gap, writes Rev Hui.
  • The month-long gloom in Chinese property credits is finally dispersing after Shimao Property Holdings priced the sector’s first high yield bond of the year on February 3. Not only did the deal attract a huge order book but it also managed to attain solid pricing.
  • The Asian high yield market has finally opened up, with issuers pouring in to get a start on their backlogged funding. But as a pair of first-time southeast Asian companies were forced to extend bookbuilding after failing to gain sufficient appetite, bankers said the market was not yet ready to embrace untested and unknown issuers.
  • The European high yield market on Tuesday keenly accepted the first triple-C rated deals of the year: a buyout financing bond from Swiss carton maker SIG Combibloc and a refinancing issue for Norske Skog, the paper company.
  • The eagerness of European credit investors — before quantitative easing has even begun — is being felt very strongly in debt markets, and in the choices issuers make between borrowing in Europe and the US.