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  • Mexican media company Televisa returned to dollar bond markets after a three and a half year hiatus on Tuesday and was able to increase the size of a planned trade despite offering minimal concession.
  • The corporate bond market took on a distinct green tinge this week - something that is becoming more and more common. Green bonds are reaching an ever wider spread of issuers - though not yet oil group Total, out on Wednesday with a euro and sterling three-trancher, nor defence group Thales, which issued on Tuesday.
  • Indiabulls Housing Finance raised $350m in its debut dollar transaction on Tuesday.
  • Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelensky caused upheaval as soon as he took office on Monday, calling for a snap election which may delay the country’s IMF funding, raising a question over the country's ability to refinance upcoming bond maturities.
  • Chinese clothing company Mulsanne Group Holding has priced its Hong Kong IPO below the indicative range, citing volatile markets fueled by the US-China trade war.
  • Blackstone’s €222.23m Deutsche-led Vivaldi CMBS was priced on Tuesday evening, with senior notes sold at 190bp over three month Euribor, wide of the 100bp mark the issuer was aiming for at price guidance.
  • Hong Kong scored with a $1bn debut green bond this week, after investors poured more than $4bn into the transaction’s final order book. The deal was a strategic attempt by the government to encourage the development of green financing in the city, but the impact remains to be seen. Morgan Davis reports.
  • Dollar issuers in the primary public sector bond market are paying some of their tightest ever spreads over US Treasuries, and investors say this is unlikely to change anytime soon as a “wall” of money floods into the market.
  • Xinjiang Goldwind Science and Technology is tapping the offshore loan market for a $475m green loan to support its windfarm projects in Argentina.
  • Bookbuilding for the Trade and Development Bank of Mongolia’s (TDBM) three year notes was carried over into a second day on Wednesday, giving investors more time to stew over the risks facing the embattled bank.
  • Three Chinese borrowers sold perpetual notes on Tuesday, raising a combined $900m from the rare structure.
  • Wells Fargo has appointed John Langley as head of the corporate and investment bank for Europe, Middle East and Africa. Langley was previously head of global financing and risk solutions at Barclays.