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  • US paper and packaging company WestRock has signed a euro denominated loan for its Luxembourg subsidiary, though the firm has an option of three currencies to drawn down.
  • Caja Rural Navarra’s fruitful return to the covered bond market last week was underpinned by several important elements, not least its decision to update and improve its sustainability framework. In the context of the European Central Bank’s diminishing support, the bank’s efforts offer a salutary guide to other borrowers, who will soon be obliged to compete harder for investors’ attention.
  • Despite expectations of a slowdown in the pace of issuance in the European high yield market, two borrowers brought €2.9bn of new bonds this week. Both issuers, Spanish construction firm Aldesa and Italian banking payments group Nexi, marketed refinancing deals.
  • Canadian banks will be able to issue debt to meet their total loss-absorbing capacity (TLAC) requirements from September, with issuers focused on the costs of what they expect will be an otherwise straightforward process of rolling over their maturing debt.
  • The investment grade corporate bond market in the US finished April on a high, with more than $8bn of issuance on Monday. Issuers wanted to get the deals done before the US Federal Reserve met on Tuesday and it was a European issuers that led the way.
  • News last Friday from the London Stock Exchange (LSE) that Oleg Deripaska is set to give up his control of Rusal by removing his majority stake in EN+ (Rusal’s parent) is the best possible outcome at this point for the US, for Russia, and for investors.
  • FIG
    UK financial institutions have issued record volumes of debt so far in 2018, and there is likely to be plenty more to come, as issuers look ahead to the risks posed by the UK's exit from the European Union.
  • Bankers do not expect Moody’s downgrade of Angola last week will have any bearing on the price of the new issue, which is expected on Wednesday.
  • Islamic lenders are missing out on a deal surge across the Middle East, with none of the swathe of loans nearing markets having been structured as Shariah-compliant, according to lenders.
  • Nigerian banks have found their loan market verve this year with one syndicated transaction near close and another due to launch soon, as pent up demand tempts borrowers back into the market.
  • The impact of Brexit on the UK’s small and medium-sized companies appears to be waning — welcome news for the sterling US private placement market — according to Intermediate Capital Group research.
  • Elliott International, the US hedge fund, sold a block of shares in Charter Court Financial Services, the UK challenger bank, after Market close on Monday.