Morgan Stanley
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Nordic Capital sold its last shares in Resurs Holding, the Swedish retail finance company, on Tuesday night, ending its investment in a firm it took to market in 2016.
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Swedish Export Credit Corp has set the terms on a $650m December 2020 floating rate note, increasing the size of its trade amid sharp volatility in the US rates market on the prospect of dovish policy action from the Federal Reserve.
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The first syndicated loan amendment to add language allowing the pricing benchmark to switch from Libor to the secured overnight funding rate (Sofr) has been launched.
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Iceland plans to defrost its euro curve with a new syndicated issue, its first since December 2017.
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Dongfeng Nissan sold its 13th Chinese auto loan ABS, a Rmb4.3bn ($621m) three-tranche note, on June 13. Both senior tranches were priced 25bp higher than the issuer's previous deal.
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After 10 days of very scanty issuance and some weak markets, more stable conditions on Tuesday brought a salvo of five deals to the euro corporate bond market, offering a wide range of single-A and triple-B credits.
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CDP Financial has set the price in line with initial price thoughts for its two year dollar benchmark, giving investors a new issue premium of around 4bp.
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Huatai Securities, the Chinese brokerage, has revived its plan to sell $500m of global depositary receipts (GDRs) on the London Stock Exchange, having postponed the deal last year due to regulatory uncertainties.
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Global Fashion Group, the emerging markets-focused online fashion retailer, intends to raise €300m to finance its growth via an IPO on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange, the company said in a statement on Monday.
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Adani Green Energy made its dollar market debut on Thursday, nabbing $500m with a green trade.
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MasterCard ventured into volatile markets on Tuesday to print its first bond since February 2018, but investors paid the price as spreads widened.
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US utilities continued to dominate dollar corporate bond issuance this week, as defensive names piled into the market before trade tensions slammed the brakes on supply on Wednesday. But issuers fought back on Thursday.