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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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New Europe Property Investments (Nepi) is ploughing ahead with efforts to engage investors on a non-deal roadshow despite having postponed its euro-denominated bond offering after meetings held at the end of October.
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Indian high yield issuers are really starting to make their presence felt with another two – Reliance Communications and Lodha Developers (LDPL) – planning to meet investors for what could be would be their debuts in the offshore dollar market.
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The US high yield bond market is in reverse, suffering from overexposure to the now-troubled shale oil sector and faced with higher interest rates all round. But market participants see the European market as providing little alternative for issuers — or for investors.
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Hapag-Lloyd, the German container shipping company, jumped into the high yield bond market on Thursday for a drive-by sale of a €250m bond, to refinance a deal maturing next year.
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Belden, the US cable maker, has tapped its 2023 bond for €200m, triggering a one notch downgrade by Moody's to Ba2 — but investors shrugged off the change.
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Israel Chemicals is out with initial price thoughts for a 10 year note and follows hot on the heels of Israel Electric which printed the same tenor on November 5.