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  • Asia's central bankers have embarked on an ambitious, much-trumpeted journey to develop their domestic bond markets and forge a pan-Asian regional market. Is it pie in the sky or is the initiative capable of dismantling the many obstacles that have long held back the local bond markets for both issuers and investors? Nick Parsons reports.
  • Barclays Capital's Convertible Cost Index rose 9bp this week, suggesting that a typical issuer would have to pay that much more yield to issue a CB.
  • Alinta Co-generation (Pinjarra) signed its A$121.5m project financing with three banks last Wednesday (May 4). Commonwealth Bank of Australia, WestLB and Westpac Banking Corp provided the funds equally on a club basis.
  • Austrian oil company OMV is in the market with a Eu800m five plus one plus one year revolver through mandated lead arrangers Bank Austria, Barclays, BNP Paribas and Citigroup.
  • Axa has returned to the market to refinance the Eu3.5bn loan it signed in July. The seven year deal pays a margin of Euribor plus 15bp for years one to five and 17.5bp thereafter.
  • When it comes to meeting their funding needs, many of Asia's largest companies often have to choose between their domestic bond market, the offshore bond market, local bank loans or the international syndicated loan market — or a combination of these.
  • Although there is a long government yield curve, the Philippine corporate bond market is tiny and often loses out to bank loans and offshore bonds. But, as Adam Harper finds out, the government is committed to its development and a few pioneering issuers have shown what is possible.
  • Poland's Bank BPH is set to issue its debut bond in the coming weeks after establishing its new Eu3bn secured MTN programme last week through joint arrangers Bank Austria Creditanstalt and UBS, as predicted by EuroWeek in January.
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