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  • The corporate bond market made a blazing start to Monday with deals for Repsol, Naturgy and LafargeHolcim on screens, as issuers cram what they can into a shortened week.
  • The People’s Bank of China announced the much-anticipated cut to the reserve requirement ratio (RRR) by 100bp for small and medium-sized banks last Friday. But in a surprise move, the central bank also dug out an old tool to appease the market after hopes were shattered on a lower benchmark deposit rate.
  • Despite an unsuccessful experience in selling a trade through an auction in March, L-Bank’s international funding officer, Sven Lautenschlaeger, has not been put off by the format. He believes it is the best way to sell a bond as it gives investors the power to set the price.
  • Bank Rakyat Indonesia is planning a return to the offshore loan market. It is inviting banks to bid for a new deal.
  • Chinese biopharmaceutical firm Akesobio has got the greenlight from the Hong Kong Stock Exchange for its IPO, which is expected to raise $200m to $300m, according to a source familiar with the matter.
  • In this round-up, China announces a reserve requirement ratio cut for small banks and a reduction on the interest rate for excess reserves, Bank of Jinzhou will sell some of its assets at a steep discount and the Chinese securities regulator condemns Nasdaq-listed Luckin Coffee for faking its sales record.
  • JP Morgan Asset Management is set to become the first foreign asset manager to fully own a Chinese fund management company, after its onshore partner agreed to exit their 15-year-old joint venture.
  • Hong Kong-listed Shanghai Fudan-Zhangjiang Bio-Pharmaceutical Co has won approval from Shanghai’s bourse to list shares on the Star board.
  • The Republic of Indonesia announced a triple-tranche bond sale on Monday morning, starting the week in Asia on a positive note. Bankers are watching investors’ response to the deal closely as more issuers line up new transactions.
  • As investors single out Mexico’s response to Covid-19 as one of the least convincing in Latin America, Fitch threw government-owned oil company Pemex and its $80bn of bonds deeper into sub-investment grade territory on Friday.
  • Owners of Ecuador debt are expecting the country’s legal system to rule on whether Rafael Correa, former president and one-time bond market foe, can participate in next year’s elections. As they plan for the South American nation’s expected restructuring, some analysts spy upside to latest secondary prices.
  • This week's intense spate of corporate bond issuance in Europe continued into Friday, though at a slightly more moderate pace, and the broadening of access continued, with the first sub-benchmark deal, for Red Electrica, the Spanish power grid. However, a Leaseplan green bond did not fly.