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  • Prologis, the US warehouses Reit, found a very warm reception to its first euro benchmark issue since 2015 this week, leading bankers to surmise that other reverse Yankee issuers might follow it to the euro market.
  • South Africa’s troubled state-run power company, Eskom, signed a $2.5bn loan from China Development Bank (CDB) this week, securing almost two-thirds of its funding requirements for the financial year and reviving hope among investors that the country’s state-owned companies have moved one step closer to returning to the capital markets. That wish was swiftly granted by Eskom mandating for its first bond since 2015. Mike Turner and Francesca Young report.
  • House purchase mortgage approvals fell by roughly 2,350 in June compared to the same time last year, a reduction of 4.7%, according to data from consumer finance advocacy group UK Finance, though the mortgage market is being propped up by refinancing activity.
  • Italian companies are enjoying some time in the loan market sun this week, with facilities for Amplifon, Tecnimont and Tages Helios finding solid support from lenders.
  • Amount: €700m
  • Caius Capital will wait until the European Banking Authority has completed a review of legacy capital instruments before proceeding with its case that UniCredit’s convertible and subordinated hybrid equity-linked securities (Cashes) are receiving the wrong regulatory treatment. This is because it believes the Cashes are included in that review, writes Jasper Cox.
  • Hearing aid company Amplifon will buy Spain’s GAES Group in a fully debt-funded acquisition with a €528m enterprise value as Italian companies extend their strong run in the loan market.
  • With €95bn issued so far this year, covered bond supply has exceeded expectations. Several analysts now suggest spreads will widen with issuance for 2018 set to reach at least €130bn.
  • Barclays has hired a former Deutsche Bank senior FX boss as its new global head of G10 foreign exchange trading and distribution.
  • Brazilian shopping centre owner General Shopping has increased the buy-back price on a tender offer for some of its existing bonds, despite having already offered a pick-up to secondary market prices.
  • The Hong Kong Stock Exchange has put a proposal to give weighted voting rights (WVRs) to corporate entities on ice, after a tiff with its mainland counterparts and pushback from investors. But the move is not an automatic win for its rival in Singapore, which last month allowed companies to hold dual-class shares. John Loh writes.
  • The new dollar bonds Brazilian company Oi will issue as part of its restructuring look very attractive, according to credit analysts, as the telecoms giant prepares to emerge from its mammoth R$65bn ($17.6bn) debt do-over.