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  • Standard Chartered has allocated a $300m offshore financing for Lotte Vietnam Shopping to four additional banks, following general syndication.
  • As the January deadline for MiFID II approaches, gaps are opening up between Europe’s regulators over how to manage the complex rules — giving banks opportunities to arbitrage them and forcing traders to compete not only on price, but on jurisdiction.
  • Credit Suisse has refreshed its management team in EMEA and is ramping up in the region again. This time it’s different, writes David Rothnie.
  • It has been a tough year for Chinese issuers as they battle with the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) to get go-aheads for offshore bond sales. But the regulator’s snail-like approval process appears to be crawling to a near standstill ahead of the National Congress of the Communist Party, leaving bankers befuddled about what to expect for the rest of the year. Morgan Davis reports.
  • India’s real estate and infrastructure investment trusts have been approved to issue bonds, in the latest move to ease the funding crunch for issuers.
  • Slovenia tapped two euro bonds for €700m this week to exchange investors out of some of its dollar debt, in a move that bankers said shows the issuer is one of Europe’s most astute borrowers.
  • We would all like to believe green bonds are helping cut carbon, but if banks don’t change their lending policies, they only serve to make us feel good.
  • Aside from the leveraged deals for Stada and Miller Homes, three sub-investment grade borrowers printed deals in the high yield corporate bond market on Thursday. The three issuers all used different tenors to raise a combined €1.06bn.
  • FIG
    Banks have been taking advantage of healthy demand for floating rate notes ahead of the European Central Bank's October meeting, with Goldman Sachs and Bank of Montreal the latest to use the format on Thursday.
  • Ukraine made a barnstorming return to the international bond market this week and extended its curve to 15 years, though the new deal has slipped below reoffer in the secondary market.
  • Turkish banks are continuing to attract international lenders to their loan financings. Several deals this year have had dozens of arrangers.
  • Commonwealth Bank of Australia subsidiary, ASB Finance, has mandated leads for a roadshow to market its first covered bond of the year and the third from a New Zealand issuer.