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  • Singapore-based internet company Sea has raised $1.35bn after boosting the size of a follow-on offering of American Depository Shares (ADS).
  • Chinese internet company Ruhnn Holdings is planning to list American Depository Shares (ADS) on the Nasdaq.
  • Indian energy company ReNew Power sealed a $375m bond sale on Tuesday with the help of a new, direct issuance structure. But although the notes were deemed to be more issuer-friendly than ReNew’s previous transaction, many were left puzzled by the borrower’s complicated approach to offshore fundraising. Morgan Davis reports.
  • An affiliate of the concessionaire operating Quito’s new airport will look to break more than the three week hiatus in Latin American new issues on Thursday with an amortising trade that looks set to come well wide of the Ecuadorean sovereign.
  • Bank of China paid a visit to the euro bond market on Wednesday, raising €500m through its Paris branch. It was just the latest Chinese financial institution to fund in the currency.
  • China Yongda Automobiles Services Holdings has tapped the offshore market for first time, for $250m, while Hong Kong’s Chow Tai Fook has launched a HK$6bn ($764m) loan into general syndication after attracting seven banks at the senior level.
  • Goldman's Richdale joins KKR – JPM hires Wong from BofA – Fubon recruits from ANZ loans – Natixis names head of PB – Deutsche promotes two for sponsors – ABN opens shop in Australia – MSCI backs China A-shares
  • To quote the late, great Karl Lagerfeld: “Sweatpants are a sign of defeat.” I only wish today’s youth would take those words of wisdom to heart.
  • Heathrow, Europe’s busiest airport, may be facing what could be one of the biggest disruptions in its history, in the shape of Brexit, but its approach to the bond market on Tuesday was smooth. Having roadshowed last week, it glided in on the wave of credit demand and landed this year’s fourth corporate 15 year issue in euros.
  • Anglo American, the South African mining company now headquartered in London, returned to the sterling bond market after an 11 year absence on Wednesday, the day after an upgrade by Standard & Poor’s to BBB (stable), and two days after a parallel raise by Moody’s.
  • The end of Libor is nigh, but the requisite market activity to build Sofr — the alternative to dollar Libor that has been pitched — into a predictable term rate is still remarkably sparse, potentially leaving issuers dependent on Libor with an unreliable alternative if the rate is no longer quoted after 2021.
  • Consumer ABS supply has outpaced the year to date volume for the same period of 2018 by $2.4bn as of Tuesday. This week, eight deals across subprime auto, floorplan and student loans brought total ABS supply to $46.5bn.