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  • London’s investment trusts have been tapping a deep pool of equity capital earmarked for green-linked deals. On Friday, SDCL Energy Efficiency Income Trust (SEEIT), the UK-listed energy efficiency investor, closed a £160m raise, £60m more than its original target and on the same day Greencoat UK Wind, the investment trust focused on UK wind farms, launched a £197.6m follow-on.
  • The UK sold its last syndication of the financial year on Tuesday, selling a £2.25bn 2051 index linked bond — its first syndication in the format since November 2019.
  • Société Générale dived into the euro market in search of preferred senior paper on Friday morning, just days after reporting its 2020 results, becoming the fourth bank to tap the seven year part of the curve in the last fortnight.
  • The date that the UK regulator has set to stop new Libor lending is just over six weeks away but market participants once again sounded the warning bells this week over the readiness of lenders to leave the old benchmark behind.
  • The green premium between Germany’s five year green Bobl and its conventional twin has increased to 3bp for the first time since the green Bobl was priced last November.
  • Global financial institutions will focus more on their home markets amid a sharp fall in funding requirements this year, leaving sterling credit investors yearning for more supply from overseas FIG issuers.
  • Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan offered investors diversity as they burnished their environmental, social and governance (ESG) credentials this week.
  • ESG Core Investments has become the first European special purpose acquisition company to go public in 2021.
  • Kirshlen Moodley, formerly a member of JP Morgan's UK M&A team, has joined BNP Paribas.
  • Ecuador’s international bonds recovered some recent losses on Thursday after former banker Guillermo Lasso crept into second place in the vote count of last Sunday’s presidential election. Yet the first round of the election has failed to provide certainty about what economic policy making might look like under the next government.
  • Argentine oil and gas company YPF will avoid a hard default after the country’s central bank, the Banco Central de la República Argentina (BCRA) agreed to provide the issuer with sufficient dollars not just to complete a bond swap, but also to make a maturity payment on March 23 to creditors that did not participate in the company's recent debt exchange.
  • Mexican broadcaster TV Azteca’s bonds fell sharply in secondary markets this week after the company missed a coupon payment on its international bonds. But the decision to stay current on, and prepay, a domestic bond left some bondholders recalling previous battles with Ricardo Salinas Pliego, Mexico’s third richest man and the owner of the broadcaster.