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  • Intercontinental Exchange on Wednesday announced that it would be launching its three month futures on regulators’ chosen successor for Libor, the sterling overnight index average, on June 1.
  • Investors who can buy investment grade corporate bonds in a variety of currencies have been making the most of the relative value of dollar assets in recent years. However, the cost of hedging those assets has been steadily rising and is now at a point where such assets are looking much less attractive for non-US investors.
  • FIG
    Investors are expecting banks to accelerate their plans to sell additional tier one (AT1) bonds in the coming weeks, but a number of recent new issues have been too tightly priced to excite some market specialists.
  • Fund managers were looking into €6.5bn of live high yield bond and loan deals in the European leveraged finance markets on Wednesday. Those speaking to GlobalCapital were happy to see that spreads are slightly widening across ratings from last year’s historic lows.
  • China’s Guangzhou R&F Properties Co, the once troubled China Hongqiao Group and a local government-owned entity in Xinjiang all managed to pull off new dollar bonds on Tuesday, albeit with some difficulty.
  • Indonesia’s Star Energy Geothermal (Wayang Windu) put together its first green bond on Tuesday after weeks of courting investors. Its $580m deal was meant to have a similar reception as the blow-out project finance trade from Paiton Energy Co in 2017, but the more difficult market backdrop posed a challenge.
  • Opinion is shifting as to whether the European Central Bank will end quantitative easing this year, with poorer economic data perhaps forcing the rate setter’s hand into extending the programme.
  • United Overseas Bank’s subsidiary in China has printed its first bond in the country, a Rmb1bn ($159m) three year note. The Singaporean lender joins a small group of foreign financial institutions that have raised onshore funding through their China arms.
  • JP Morgan has appointed Marta Arteaga to its EMEA equity capital markets execution team as a vice-president.
  • Philippine conglomerate San Miguel Corp and its power unit SMC Global Power are jointly seeking a $1.1bn loan to finance a $1.9bn acquisition of a power plant in the country.
  • China’s cautious approach to credit default swaps (CDS) has left the market a minnow compared with other large financial systems. Paolo Danese investigates.
  • Ping An Healthcare and Technology Co, a subsidiary of Chinese conglomerate Ping An Group, will launch bookbuilding for its Hong Kong IPO next week, according to a source close to the deal.