Northeast Asia
-
Frequent Panda bond issuer GLP returned last week with a five year tranche and a nine year note. But most investors did not have the stomach for the five year leg of the deal. Instead, they were enticed by the two exit options in the longer dated portion, said a source close to the transaction.
-
Thunder Bridge Acquisition has filed for a $200m Nasdaq IPO, set to be the first special purpose acquisition company (Spac) focused on China’s financial technology sector.
-
In his latest Clawback, columnist Philippe Espinasse takes a closer look at the Hong Kong bourse’s guidelines on the suitability of IPO candidates.
-
LCH, the majority-owned clearing house of the London Stock Exchange, on Tuesday began clearing non-deliverable interest rate swaps in Chinese yuan, Korean won and Indian rupees.
-
HSBC has opened a China desk in Israel to capture the growing trade and investment flows between the two countries.
-
Ingrid Millet International filed a draft prospectus in Hong Kong on Monday, vying for approval to list on the city’s stock exchange.
-
China Aoyuan Property Group, Hydoo International Holding and Indonesia’s Federal International Finance wasted no time in hitting the bond market on Wednesday after the Labour Day holiday.
-
Hong Kong and other offshore financial centres can help Chinese issuers broaden their appeal among international green bond investors, according to Vincent Lee, executive director at the Hong Kong Monetary Authority.
-
Huya, a live streaming platform backed by YY and Tencent, has started bookbuilding for its up to $180m IPO on the New York Stock Exchange.
-
Chilean state-owned copper mining company Codelco raised $600m of 30 year money in Taiwan on Monday in the first Formosa trade from a Chilean corporate.
-
Ping An Healthcare and Technology priced its HK$8.8bn ($1.1bn) IPO at the top of guidance after a flood of demand from local and international investors.
-
The China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission (CBIRC) is lifting the bar on international banks to underwrite Chinese government bonds and their local branches to trade derivatives, one of a slew of measures released this weekend to set foreign banks in China free and increase competition in the onshore market.