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  • Some DCM bankers have started pitching bond buybacks to EM issuers after the sharp fall in bond prices, but there has been no uptake yet as despite expected slower growth, borrowers are reluctant to spend money when they have no confidence of regaining market access in the coming months.
  • Redemption requests have are hitting EM bond fund managers fast this week, making some of the opportunities created by extreme market volatility hard to seize.
  • The coronavirus crisis is shaking up companies' financing arrangements in the most drastic way since the 2008-9 financial crisis, as firms strive to secure liquidity for what are likely to be many tough months. So far there have been only a few high profile cases of companies drawing down revolving credit facilities, but this is expected to grow, as long-established norms crumble and new patterns emerge.
  • Royal Bank of Canada, Toronto Dominion Bank and Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce all attempted to access the covered bond market on Tuesday with euros clearly showing more depth than sterling. The fact the three issuers were in the market simultaneously, whilst a fourth was monitoring the market, is not coincidental and contrasts with European and UK issuers that already have a central bank liquidity life line.
  • Oman’s Bank Muscat, which is part-owned by the Sultanate of Oman, raised a $650m loan from international lenders. The loan was announced amid Moody's downgrading the bank and the Omani sovereign, the latest in a string of rating actions that have pushed the challenged Gulf nation into junk territory.
  • Latin America bond issuers and investors were thrown deeper into the coronavirus crisis on Monday, with Friday’s spread tightening more than cancelled out as the US Federal Reserve’s surprise 100bp rate cut on Sunday failed to arrest a fall in risk assets.
  • The UK government will announce a rescue plan for businesses on Tuesday after the prime minister changed guidance on dealing with the Covid-19 coronavirus the day before. But corporate bond bankers and investors believe it will do little to stop corporate bond prices from languishing.
  • Market participants are debating whether the EU is responding quickly and strongly enough in the coronavirus crisis, after the bloc put off the question of how to involve the European Stability Mechanism on Monday evening.
  • Chinese issuer Shandong Ruyi Technology Group Co missed an interest payment on a Rmb1bn ($143m) domestic bond on Monday, just days after holding a bondholder meeting.
  • The Philippine Stock Exchange suspended all trading on Tuesday, after the country’s president announced stricter coronavirus quarantine measures for Luzon, the northern island home to the capital Manila.
  • Xinjiang Guanghui Industry Investment (Group) Co has priced $59m of new bonds as part of an exchange offer. It received lukewarm response for the transaction, with existing investors of less than a fifth of the original deal agreeing to roll over.
  • Ping An Bank has stepped up in the offshore loan market, launching its first deal on a sole basis for Shandong Energy Group.