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  • A flurry of large trades from the European Investment Bank (EIB), the International Finance Corporation (IFC) and the World Bank helped push overall Kangaroo volume so far this year higher than those seen for the whole of 2016.
  • No matter where in the world a European trading firm wants to find a counterparty, they will have to comply with the Markets in Financial Instruments Directive (MiFID) from January 2018. And in Asia, that might cost them business, according to panellists at an International Swaps and Derivatives Association (ISDA) conference this week.
  • Public sector borrowers this week smashed through their conventional curves with green bond issues. But there was some debate over whether this marks the start of a trend or is merely the product of scorching conditions in both the euro and dollar markets.
  • European Parliament members Jakob von Weizsäcker and Kay Swinburne published a draft report on planned central counterparty (CCP) recovery and resolution rules this week.
  • High yield bond investors have warned that the market is at risk of a substantial erosion in terms, with some even claiming that a cornerstone of judging a company’s financial health — earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation (Ebitda) — is in danger of becoming a meaningless number.
  • Standard Chartered was back in the euro senior market after a near three year absence this week, picking up its first callable bonds after targeting slightly longer tenors for the minimum requirement for own funds and eligible liabilities (MREL).
  • Bids came due this week on two leveraged loan portfolios totalling €365m and leveraged finance bankers said that the secondary market managed to absorb the sales without any wobbles.
  • The debt restructuring saga at Norwegian paper company Norske Skog has taken another sharp turn a day after seemingly reaching a breakthrough with investors, after a group claiming to represent more than half of the company’s unsecured creditors rejected the latest proposal.
  • ABS
    There is a potentially substantial investor base ready to invest in green ABS, but there are still too few assets to put into pools for the market to truly flourish.
  • The international distribution arm of the State Oil Company of Azerbaijan (Socar) is close to refinancing a $250m facility taken out in October last year while facing down a recent rating downgrade.
  • Rating: Aa2/A+/AA-
  • Guarantor: EPIC BPI-France