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  • Two Chinese transactions on Wednesday served as perfect examples of how duration can make a difference. Greenland Holding Group Co’s $500m sub-one year bond attracted a larger-than-expected order book, while China Overseas Grand Oceans Group (Cogo) had to pull a five year trade as a result of insufficient demand.
  • HSBC’s China subsidiary returned to the domestic bond market on Tuesday, issuing a Rmb3bn ($473.6m) three year bond, trading on the bank’s name recognition onshore.
  • Hong Kong’s market watchdog reprimanded and fined Citi on Thursday for its work as a sponsor on the 2009 IPO of China-based Real Gold Mining.
  • Dollar bond investors got their first taste of a Cambodian credit this week when casino operator NagaCorp grabbed $300m from its debut outing. But a huge tightening in the secondary market reflected the struggle in finding a fair price for the issuer. Morgan Davis reports.
  • Chinese automobile financing retail transaction platform Yixin Group is tapping the loan market for a $150m borrowing, six months after listing through a HK$6.8bn ($867.2m) IPO in Hong Kong.
  • Convertible bond sales in Asia are poised to scale new heights, as a combination of rising interest rates and soaring share prices prompt issuers to look beyond traditional equity and debt. But bankers say the glut of new paper means issuers have to be willing to pay up. John Loh reports.
  • How worried are international investors and DCM bankers about the spate of corporate bond defaults in China’s onshore debt market? Addison Gong finds out.
  • Two Qatari banks raised new debt in different formats on Thursday, proving that Qatari banks have a multitude of funding options available to them.
  • Turkey’s Isbank has signed a $1.48bn-equivalent syndicated loan in line with the existing pricing benchmark for its compatriot peers, again showing that rating downgrades have little effect on loan borrowing rates for the country’s banking sector.
  • Morocco has landed a €200m loan from the African Development Bank that will go towards the country’s agriculture industry, a sector that Standard & Poor’s recently said was part of the reason the sovereign’s credit rating remains “constrained”.
  • Mexican state owned oil company Pemex (Petróleos Mexicanos) raised €3.15bn ($3.722bn) across four tranches on Wednesday to provide some relief to a bruised and battered Lat Am bond market.
  • First Abu Dhabi Bank hit the Taiwanese market for a Rmb1.1bn ($172.69m) bond on Wednesday, just two months after its last Formosa deal.