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  • Asian high yield issuers have used sophisticated cashflow structures and equity enhancements to meet investors' needs and raise cash where plain vanilla structures might not have worked. Adam Harper asks how this has been done and assesses the importance of structuring in high yield deals.
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  • The high yield bond market offers potentially transforming funding for borrowers that have not tapped the international capital markets before. But bankers must offer the right advice on structure, size, pricing and timing if a debut issuer is to sell a successful deal that performs well.
  • A new generation of high yield issuers in Asia's growing economies have excited investors with attractive yields and credit stories. Bankers predict that companies' drive to expand will continue to enlarge the region's high yield market. But Asian high yield bonds are prone to volatility in response to global market conditions, and investors have become more selective in an increasingly complex market.
  • China's compelling growth story has provided some of the most exciting high yield transactions of the last 18 months. Investment banks have enjoyed juicy fees by Asian standards and investors have jumped at the chance to get exposure to China. However, regulatory difficulties and concerns over corporate governance still present challenges for the sector.
  • Macau's casinos now take as much money as Las Vegas and investors are keen to get a piece of the action as the industry moves into an ambitious expansion phase. There has only been one bond issue so far, but bankers hope that the incredible growth in capacity on the Cotai strip will bring more borrowers to the market.
  • In December 2005, Galaxy Entertainment became the first Macanese casino operator to access the international bond market, where it set an impressive precedent. Galaxy chief executive Anthony Carter reveals why the B1/B+ company chose the bond market over other forms of financing and why the locally-owned operator is different from US casino giant Wynn.
  • Ashmore Investment's head of research, Jerome Booth, suggests that the IMF should forget trying to be a development bank and focus on averting global crises.
  • AU Optronics, Taiwan's largest liquid crystal display maker, has mandated a group of four banks to arrange a $300m dual currency seven year loan to fund its expansion in China.
  • Kao Corp, the Japanese beauty products and chemicals company, has signed a ¥220bn ($1.87bn) syndicated loan to partly refinance its acquisition of Kanebo Cosmetics from Japan's Industrial Revitalization Corp.
  • Japan's Financial Services Authority this week suspended JP Morgan Trust Bank from conducting any new real estate trust business for six months, for lapses in due diligence and internal controls on some securitisation and property trust financings.
  • Dealers in the credit default swap market are working on an alternative to the net physical settlement procedure that the International Swaps and Derivatives Association is spearheading to cash settle credit default swap trades.