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Natixis

  • Natixis made a string of appointments at the top of its corporate and investment banking division on Wednesday.
  • Natixis has tied up with Vermilion Partners, an M&A advisory firm, to boost its cross-border advisory business in China.
  • A unit of Puma Energy is in the loan market, seeking $1.1bn across three tranches, according to a banker who received the invitation.
  • Bankers and investors said that a new deal from Paprec Group, the French waste recycler, showed that the supply of refinancing deals still had legs and could boost overall issuance volumes in the high yield market. Paprec's deal was also green, but did anyone care?
  • After a reasonable wait, investors are starting to see the more frequent investment grade corporate bond issuers return to the market. On Tuesday, French materials company Saint-Gobain and French telecoms operator Orange sold benchmark deals and UK media company WPP sold a dual-tranche issue.
  • Private equity firm CVC and local investor Alba are funding their €3.8bn acquisition of 201m shares in Gas Natural, the energy group, with a €1.9bn loan, which is set to become one of the largest Spanish financial deals of the year.
  • French car manufacturer Peugeot has been on a ratings rollercoaster in the last 10 years. On Friday, now back to the highest sub-investment grade ratings, the company sold its third seven year deal in three years.
  • China National Chemical Corp (ChemChina) enlisted the help of 18 lead managers to sell a six tranche bond in two currencies on Wednesday.
  • Islamic Development Bank released price guidance for its dollar benchmark sukuk on Wednesday and leads are expecting to price the note on Thursday.
  • China National Chemical Corp (ChemChina) has raised $6.4bn from a six-tranche transaction in euros and dollars to refinance debt taken for Syngenta’s acquisition. The issuer was willing to pay up to take more on the long end of the curve, with the juicy premium summoning a book of more than $15bn at its peak.
  • Combined books of $9.5bn enabled the Republic of Senegal to both print the tightest ever dollar 30 year dollar bond from a sub-Saharan African issuer (ex-South Africa), and to revise guidance by 50bp for its euro debut on Tuesday.
  • Price talk for Senegal’s new euro bond prompted fierce debate on Tuesday morning. Based on guidance, syndicate bankers away from the deal questioned the cost of the deal compared with a dollar issue, though the strong pricing result in euros may have put the debate to rest.