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  • Chinese property company Fujian Yango Group Co raised $150m from a quick 1.5 year bond sale on Thursday, after a rocky start to the year.
  • More Latin American issuers could look for 30 year debt in international markets, said DCM bankers after Petrobras sold its first new note at that point of the curve since 2014.
  • Banco do Brasil returned to dollar markets on Wednesday, taking advantage of scarcity value to snatch a tight five year senior unsecured benchmark.
  • Cement company Cemex brought hope for the Mexican bond pipeline as it turned to Europe to become the first Mexican credit to issue internationally since January, while the sovereign also crossed the Atlantic for investor meetings this week.
  • Bond investors embraced pan-emerging markets telecoms company Millicom International Cellular’s debt-funded acquisitions in Central America as they piled into the company’s latest bond and continued to demand the paper in the grey market.
  • Deutsche Telekom became the third blue chip company in a row to issue a multitranche bond with no new issue concession on Tuesday, after PepsiCo and McDonald’s had both pulled off the feat the day before.
  • One of the fondest hopes of the cryptocurrency true believers looks set to come true this year. Real decentralised value transfer systems could be on their way both to retail and institutional banking. But, in a cruelly ironic twist, they will be delivered by the blackest names in individual privacy and financial libertarianism.
  • SSA
    New issue premiums have all but vanished from European bond markets, as well as the dollar market for supranationals, sovereigns and agencies, with borrower after borrower ramming pricing down to its curve — and in some cases, way through it. Everyone knows it will end at some point, but for now, investors are offering no resistance — in fact, they are chasing deals tighter. By Jon Hay, Burhan Khadbai, Mike Turner and Tyler Davies
  • PepsiCo took one of its rare sips at the euro bond market on Monday, and was rewarded with two bonds, seen as priced flat to and through its curve.
  • Ukraine drew attention for all the wrong reasons this week, tapping a November 2028 line for $350m, allegedly well below the market value.
  • David Malpass, the US's candidate for the presidency of the World Bank, appeared last night on track to take over the leadership of the world’s largest multilateral lender.
  • CEE
    Ukraine courted controversy this week, turning to the private market to tap its November 2028 bond. The trade caught the attention of investors and bankers, with some saying that JP Morgan had retained the deal and priced it well below the market rate. Lewis McLellan reports.