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  • Concerns over the upcoming budget from Italy’s populist government — as well as the months’ long economic crisis in Turkey — took its toll on government bond yields in the eurozone periphery this week. But a hunt for safe assets among investors did play into the hands of top tier credits.
  • Petrofac has turned to bilateral financing to reduce its reliance on its existing revolving credit facility, with three banks providing the UK-headquartered oil field services company with separate credit lines.
  • CEE
    Within a fortnight, the Republic of Turkey is planning to announce “additional sources of financing” to fill a $2.5bn gap in its 2018 external bond funding plans, Berat Albayrak, the country's finance minister, said on an investor conference call on Thursday afternoon. Albayrak also said Turkey is not in talks with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and ruled out capital controls.
  • Elon Musk’s shock announcement on Twitter last week that he had secured funding to take Tesla private at $420 a share rocked US financial markets and send its shares and bonds rallying. Yet one week on questions are being asked about Musk’s “funding secured” claim most notably from the SEC.
  • A London-based SSA syndicate banker at Morgan Stanley has left the bank a year after joining, GlobalCapital understands.
  • Turkey’s self-inflicted problems have had ramifications well beyond its borders and led to comparisons with previous emerging market crises.
  • Covered bond primary activity is expected to pick up from as early as next week with a couple of German issuers understood to be monitoring the market. FIG activity is predicted to ratchet up again the following week as borrowers move in advance of potentially negative rating news.
  • The US corporate bond market continued at a strong pace this week, ignoring the lure of the beach that sees its European counterparts' new issue flow slow to a standstill in August. More than $22bn of bonds were sold in the first three days of the week and around half of that was raised by United Technologies Corp.
  • The Dutch Growth Joint Venture, controlled by direct lender Neos, closed for a targeted €1bn, with investment firm KKR as the principal investor.
  • Rating: Aaa/AAA
  • World Bank is looking to issue more deals in euros in its fiscal year, ahead of large redemptions in the currency.
  • SSA
    Northcross Capital, the specialist manager that sponsors the Anglesea Funding asset backed commercial paper (ABCP) conduit, launched two of the first new ABCP vehicles structured seen in years: Glencove Funding and Longship Funding.