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  • VFS Global, the visa and passport services division of Kuoni, allocated its euro and sterling loan refinancing package this week, after increasing the euro offering and tightening pricing on both tranches.
  • The double whammy of the US Federal Reserve meeting and a public holiday across parts of Europe slammed the brakes on an already slow week of corporate bond issuance on Thursday. However, bankers are confident that the last few weeks of June will go out with a bang rather than a whimper.
  • Recently de-merged Kommunalkredit Austria (KA) has mandated leads to roadshow the first social covered bond ever to be issued from a public sector programme, and the first green bond from Austria. Rated Baa2, it is also set to be one of the weakest credits in the covered bond universe.
  • The mystery of the European high yield paradox grew this week as investors began tucking into €4.5bn of new bonds amid all-time low yields. Yet they face a puzzlingly thin deal pipeline for the second half of the year. But dormant borrowers are starting to wake up to the joys of primary, said bankers and lawyers.
  • ABS
    The structured product market is booming, with rampant investor demand leading to record-breaking tights in asset classes such as auto ABS. This has sparked fresh calls for the European Central Bank (ECB) to stop buying up paper in the market, writes Sam Kerr.
  • The Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) priced its IPO on Monday to raise Prp4.5bn ($42.8m), completing a demutualisation exercise and public offering that has been in the works for years. But while books were oversubscribed, the bourse had to contend with myriad challenges to get across the line, writes John Loh.
  • Equity capital market participants were stunned this week when a US bank, thought to be Morgan Stanley, offered to charge nothing to be a sponsor of China Tower’s $10bn Hong Kong IPO — a highly unusual move even by the city’s ultra-competitive standards. But the aggression was not unique, as most banks asked for token fees in the hope of winning the mandate.
  • Ramadan, the Islamic holy month of fasting which began on May 26, has caused delays to loan deals that were expected to close this week in the Middle East, according to bankers in the region.
  • After a barnstorming first half, Asia’s debt markets are looking forward to what H2 brings. Optimism is high after markets proved their ability to shrug off geopolitical tensions and widespread uncertainty, posting a sharp increase in first half volumes, writes Morgan Davis.
  • Well funded European financial institutions could take a step back from the euro market in the build up to the summer period, leaving it to firms from outside the region to keep FIG investors entertained in the coming months.
  • China Three Gorges Corp sealed its inaugural offshore green bond on Wednesday, raising €650m from a seven year deal. The notes were sold at a tight spread, with bankers saying that the “European style” execution was due to strong demand from investors.
  • Anchoring the Philippine economy amid rough seas