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  • The first two big acquisition loans of the year in Europe, for Amer Sports and Ahlsell, have both been subject to pushback from investors on some of the most borrower-friendly terms in their original security packages. That has set a standard for new deals, now markets have recovered much of the ground they lost in the fourth quarter.
  • A dismal start to the year for EMEA syndicated lending volume is expected to continue throughout the quarter, as borrowers remain worried about allocating capital to investment amid a wave of uncertainty.
  • NordLB’s Luxembourg subsidiary extended its covered bond curve on Wednesday with an well received five year public sector backed deal. The bonds offered a very attractive spread for a deal from a core European jurisdiction, ensuring that demand from a diverse audience was quick to build.
  • Qatar International Islamic Bank sold its $500m five year sukuk on Tuesday, printing 25bp inside initial price guidance from an order book that reached $4bn in the first international sukuk deal from Qatar since May 2017.
  • The development of a harmonised European covered bond legal framework hit a new milestone on Tuesday after an agreement was reached by the European Parliament and member states on the covered bond directive, paving the way for final approval in a few weeks.
  • A UK securitization BWIC in big size will set the tone for the European ABS market on Thursday, as limited primary supply this year has left bankers with few pricing points to work from. The seller may be leaning in the rally across UK assets, driven by positive newsflow on Brexit over the last two days.
  • Almarai, the largest dairy company in the Middle East, sold its $500m five year sukuk on Tuesday having drawn a huge $5.3bn of demand for the deal — the first from a Saudi investment grade private corporate issuer.
  • PlayTech, the UK-based gambling technology company, announced its second high yield bond issue on Tuesday afternoon, seeking to raise €350m to redeem an out-of-the-money convertible bond issued in 2014. During the roadshow, it confirmed a new contract with UK gaming group GVC, which helped it print tight in a market that was already supportive.
  • Most investors agree that emerging markets are in for a big year, based primarily on an overdone sell-off at the end of last year. But Jan Dehn, head of global research at Ashmore Group, believes that the asset class will benefit from a big realignment in asset allocation in the medium term.
  • The Kangaroo bond market’s recent bounce kept pace this week as Asian Development Bank on Tuesday raised an additional A$100m ($71.6m) with a tap of an existing A$250m issue. Bankers are confident that more supply could follow.
  • Bankinter found plenty of demand for a new senior transaction on Wednesday, as the Spanish lender entered a strong market to refinance its only other outstanding senior bond.
  • The US-led equity rally of the first two months of 2019 is likely to continue, says Eddie Perkin, chief investment officer of Eaton Vance. In an interview with GlobalCapital, he said this should prompt an increase in equity capital markets issuance, and stronger investor returns than many would have expected after a terrible end to last year.