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  • South Korean heavy industry company Doosan Infracore Co sold a $300m three year bond on Tuesday, helped along by a guarantee from Korea Development Bank.
  • India’s Adani Ports and Special Economic Zone (APSEZ) and French oil and gas company Total are jointly raising a $600m loan for a gas project in the south Asian country. Eight banks have already formed the senior lending group, with the leads now seeking commitments in general.
  • Xiaofei Guo has joined Natixis to support the bank’s green and sustainable deal origination and solutions sales in Asia Pacific.
  • Two Indonesian borrowers, Bank Negara Indonesia and CSM Corporatama, have launched their loans into general syndication, according to several bankers.
  • Morgan Stanley sold the latest conduit CMBS transaction at the end of last week, putting the US non-agency CMBS sector on track to eclipse the total volume issued in 2018.
  • Czech gaming company Sazka, with lottery operations around Europe, debuted in the euro market on Tuesday with €300m of senior unsecured notes, priced at 4.125%.
  • A new drive is being launched by investors in London today to persuade companies to root out modern slavery in their supply chains. The quest will be hard in two ways: firms will risk bad publicity if they find slavery; and investors are unlikely to make money out of the work.
  • Green quantitative easing is having a moment. As the European Central Bank restarts the ordinary brown kind of money printing, buying corporate and public sector bonds, a broad range of commentators, from left wing activists to BlackRock’s head of official institutions, argue that central banks ought to put their balance sheet power in play to green the world. But turning to the central banks is a counsel of despair. The technocrats should be a last resort; it is politicians who should be in the vanguard.
  • Singapore’s Temasek Financial, part of the government investment firm Temasek Holdings, is headed to the euro bond market, as low spreads continue to draw international borrowers.
  • The European Central Bank let markets look under the bonnet of its new Corporate Sector Purchase Programme on Monday, and the only thing the raw data has confirmed is that omnipotent central banks like to move in mysterious ways seemingly at odds with what the market wants or needs.
  • Oil major BP and motorbike maker Harley-Davidson both hit the euro bond market on Tuesday, in the wake of the European Central Bank’s far bigger than expected first week of corporate bond purchases.
  • The European Securities and Markets Authority has issued technical advice for the European Commission on the treatment of third-country central counterparties (TC-CCPs).