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  • Chinese financial institutions are leading a revival in Asia’s loan market as they take advantage of a shift in market dynamics to tackle their refinancing needs. Borrowers from other industries are also likely to join the action before long — if only to get ahead of a possible US interest rate hike after a rise in inflation, writes Pan Yue.
  • China Water Affairs Group has made a rare outing in the debt market for a $200m green bond.
  • Monde Nissin has covered the Philippines’ largest ever IPO on the first day of bookbuilding, after securing pre-launch demand from a high profile line-up of cornerstone investors.
  • Inversiones Atlántida (Invatlan), the Central American financial services group that owns the largest bank in Honduras, is looking to raise $300m of senior secured bonds, it told fixed income investors this week.
  • SRI
    The current of interest in sustainability-linked finance entered a new district of the capital markets this week — private equity funds-of-funds. AlpInvest Partners, one of the biggest managers in the market, has signed a $650m facility tied to its environmental, social and governance investment practices. But the deal raises the question of the role of transparency in such financings.
  • Deutsche Bank has hired Richard Robinson, a Morgan Stanley banker of some 21 years, as a managing director and vice-chairman of its global industrials group in New York.
  • Weil, Gotshal & Manges has hired a capital markets partner from Shearman & Sterling in New York.
  • Kayne Anderson Capital has refinanced the mezzanine tranches of a deal originally priced in 2019 in an unusual repricing that left the senior notes intact.
  • The SSA syndication fee schedule is no longer fit for purpose, if it ever was. The EU has kick-started the debate, but the flaws in the business model go well beyond the issues the EU's fees grid has raised.
  • Public sector borrowers should be careful what they wish for. Those looking to follow the European Union’s lead in lowering the underwriting fees they pay to banks could cause an unwelcome distortion to their market at a time when getting funding through the door with minimal drama is perhaps more crucial than ever.
  • The European Central Bank is struggling to maintain its exposure to peripheral European covered bonds this year, due to falling issuance, and has therefore increased its exposure to core European markets. This trend is set to continue, as supply will remain muted — even though banks are running out of eligible collateral to pledge for repo funding.
  • By being allowed to hide the details of sustainability targets and incentives, Europe’s investment grade corporations are being given an easy ride when it comes to sustainability-linked loans. They must be more open if the market is to remain credible.