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In recent weeks, private credit and direct lenders have brought more certainty to borrowers as capital markets were roiled by tariff chaos
Banks already working on deals in the industrials and chemicals sectors
As Ares raises the largest direct lending fund, Goldman Sachs reorganises to serve the trend
Sole bookrunner Morgan Stanley gets deal multiple times covered
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Dividend recapitalisation deals, such as the ones ChemicaInvest and Ten Cate launched this week, are on the rise. The move, considered aggressive by leveraged loan investors, is nevertheless becoming more common and accepted in the present issuer’s market.
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Two leveraged loan deals in the market this week, for Tele Columbus and PlusServer, have both had their margins tightened by 25bp, suggesting that market participants who predicted early this week that spreads were going to start widening had spoken too soon.
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Dutch polymer and resins group ChemicaInvest increased the size of its loan deal at the tight end of guidance on Wednesday, as it repriced its old debt and paid a dividend to its sponsors CVC and DSM.
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Deals topping €1bn are becoming more common in the European leveraged loan market, pushing gross issuance to annual record levels. CeramTec announced the latest, with a €1.1bn leveraged buyout.
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Borrowers and investors marched on in the European leveraged finance markets this week, pricing €1.5bn of high yield bonds while bankers have been able to tighten terms on new loan deals during syndication. Deals pulled earlier in the week in the US are already a fading memory.
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Investors are keeping pace with heavy issuance in the European leveraged loan market, with ticket sizes increasing in response to a rush of jumbo sized loans this week, including a $2.4bn equivalent deal from Paysafe.