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  • Banks have submitted their proposals to Malaysian telecommunications company Axiata Group, which is seeking $800m from the loan market for refinancing.
  • The liquidity crisis at two Chinese dollar bond defaulters, Peking University Founder Group Co and Kangde Xin Composite Material Group Co, has deepened further amid more non-payments.
  • Though Latin American bonds offered some consolation to investors on Friday, the relief is likely to be short-lived as the region buckles down to fully face the effects of the coronavirus pandemic.
  • Asian equity indices were a sea of red on Monday, wiping out the gains from last Friday following the announcements of US and European stimulus packages. Primary market deal flow is almost non-existent, but bankers continue to pitch for business.
  • Hengan International has sold a second Panda bond linked to combatting the Covid-19 pandemic, with 10% of the deal proceeds earmarked for buying raw materials used to produce face masks.
  • In this round-up, the reserve requirement ratio cut in China went into effect on Monday, the country’s industrial output declined sharply in the first two months of the year, and the State Administration of Foreign Exchange lifted the cap on outstanding foreign debt of Chinese issuers.
  • SSA
    A vicious move in swap spreads left investors in IFC’s $1bn social bond with one of the lowest SSA spreads to US Treasuries ever on Wednesday, and a subsequent reversal has left investors wincing. Some questioned the strategy and timing of the trade, but most simply thought that investors were the victim of circumstance.
  • The European Central Bank's new stimulus package will lower supply and boost demand for covered bonds, suggesting that ECB president Christine Lagarde will in fact 'close spreads' in the asset class. For now though, valuations remain under pressure and spreads are likely to widen in the short term.
  • This week, it was the best of times, it was the worst of times – and despite volatility caused by the spread of the Covid-19, a trickle of MTN issuance has managed to slip through into the market.
  • This week's funding scorecard looks at the progress French agencies have made in their funding programmes by mid-March.
  • FIG
    Markets expressed disappointment following the European Central Bank’s monetary policy meeting this week, but some analysts said that the changes made to the terms of its bank funding schemes represented a real war chest to support lending.
  • Citi was the sole issuer with a primary deal on either side of the Atlantic amid Thursday’s markets bloodbath, as its EMEA securitization team cleared an RMBS backed by UK buy-to-let loans — not for a client, but for Citi as principal. The US bank may have taken a hit of at least £7m to its planned P&L for the issue, but successfully sold £294m notional of bonds to investors on the worst markets day since 1987.