Morgan Stanley
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Japan’s SoftBank Group Corp has wrapped up a landmark $8.9bn sell-down in Alibaba Group Holdings through a combination of five separate transactions, including raising $5.5bn via the sale of mandatory exchangeable trust securities (METS). The size of the METS is impressive, making it the largest equity-linked deal globally since 2010, but it also came with a structure almost never seen before in Asia. Jonathan Breen reports.
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Google is exiting its stake in Lenovo Group via an overnight offering of shares that could raise as much as HK$1.72bn ($221m).
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Doosan Heavy Industries & Construction is selling down some of its treasury shares in a deal which could bag the firm up to W165bn ($138.3m).
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Veneto Banca’s IPO attempt has been set for the latter part of June, but whether it has any better success than Banca Popolare di Verona at finding institutional demand remains in doubt.
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Japan’s SoftBank Group Corp has blown open the equity-linked market with the launch of a $5bn bond exchangeable into shares of Alibaba Group Holdings, part of a planned $7.9bn sell-down in the e-commerce giant’s stock.
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After a bumper week in dollars, euros will be back on the CEEMEA table this week with PKN Orlen and Croatia wrapping up meetings on Tuesday. But the European Central Bank meeting on Thursday and US data on Friday is expected to keep issuance limited this week.
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Philips Lighting and Maisons du Monde’s IPOs have run precisely along the same timelines, with many similarities in how the sales went, and today their debut trading performances also ran in parallel, as both stocks jumped. Philips Lighting closed up 10% and Maisons du Monde 5.9%.
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Supranationals were able to take €8bn out of the long end of the euro curve this week amid another week of demand for duration, but the deals arguably suggest the strength of that interest could be waning, said bankers.
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International institutional investors showed no signs of ‘Brexit’ jitters this week as the last of the sovereign's syndication before the European Union referendum drew a record book of more than £15bn.
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Dong Energy began the bookbuild for its Copenhagen IPO on Thursday, at a price range of Dkr200 to Dkr255 a share, which would give it a market cap of Dkr83.5bn to Dkr106.5bn ($12.5bn-$16bn).