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  • SolarEdge Technologies, the Nasdaq-listed Israeli smart energy company, has raised $500m by issuing a new five year convertible bond, tapping into the tremendous amount of investor appetite for ESG-friendly companies.
  • Payment in kind notes and preference shares will likely play an increased role in new leveraged buyout structures, as sponsors seek to bridge the gap to ever more stretched equity valuations against a backdrop of depressed earnings.
  • China Yangtze Power, a Chinese utility company, has launched its listing on the London Stock Exchange, becoming the third company to list in London through the London-Shanghai Stock Connect scheme. The deal is expected to be worth up to $3.4bn.
  • Spain’s expected bond syndication, thought to be coming this week, now appears unlikely, according to several SSA bankers.
  • Groupe BPCE is bringing a French residential mortgage-backed security, offering a €1.09bn senior note with a coupon of 65bp over three month Euribor.
  • Debut issuers Bausparkasse Schwäbisch Hall and Sumitomo Mitsui Trust Bank are marketing their inaugural covered bonds amid a pick-up in secondary market trading.
  • Banks may be using their lending relationships with companies to press them into granting bond mandates, the International Organisation of Securities Commissions has warned. This follows the UK Financial Conduct Authority's remarks about similar pressure for equity mandates in April.
  • AIB Group's new euro tier two capital issue, its first green bond, was comfortably subscribed on Wednesday, lifting confidence in the bank debt market after a difficult start to the week.
  • Gabriel Grego, managing partner and chief investment officer at Quintessential Capital, is known among investors for his devastating critiques of fraudulent companies. A former paratrooper in the Israeli Defence Force, Grego is on what he sees as a moral crusade to sniff out corporate corruption. He is adamant, he tells GlobalCapital, that activist short selling is a force for good in financial markets — and society as a whole.
  • Shares in Knaus Tabbert, the German maker of caravans and motor homes, were almost flat in trading on Wednesday following the company’s €232m IPO on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange. The deal was the first of two German IPOs this week.
  • Australia’s fourth syndication of its financial year has set a new size record — the third time it has done so in as many months — but despite the wave of Australian govvie supply, demand still seems fierce.
  • Skipton Building Society is looking to sell its first series of non-preferred senior notes in sterling — a market that has proved shaky amid a fresh spike in Brexit volatility.