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  • SSA
    It was shaping up to be a healthy week for euro issuance in the SSA market until a rumour about the European Central Bank planning to “taper off” its asset purchase programme ruined the vibe.
  • This has been a week of wariness for euro investment grade corporate bonds. A German public holiday on Monday kept a lid on deals, but there were at least two go/no-go calls on Tuesday that yielded no deals, despite an improving tone in corporate spreads and stock markets.
  • FIG
    Risk appetite has yet to return following last week’s intense fears around Deutsche Bank, but a number of positive developments suggested the FIG market can welcome the return of vanilla senior issuance before October blackout periods end.
  • Block issuance has been active this week, with three notable accelerated bookbuilds all sold well. Monday also brought the announcement of what could be the largest IPO in London this year.
  • The combination of newly announced MSCI China equity indices and a relaxation of renminbi qualified institutional investors (RQFII) rules last week has reignited discussions about A-shares inclusion in the MSCI Emerging Market index. While the moves are considered important, they do not warrant an off-cycle decision, say market participants.
  • GDS Holdings, which is heading to the US to go public, has begun premarketing its IPO, with bookbuilding expected in the next two weeks, according to a source close to the transaction.
  • Malaysian conglomerate Sime Darby was inundated with orders for its MR2.4bn ($571.1m) overnight share sale this week, making the tightly executed block southeast Asia’s largest follow-on in a year.
  • India’s UPL Corp opened books for its inaugural G3 bond on Wednesday. It is the only deal to have launched so far this week in Asia ex-Japan with China on a one-week holiday to celebrate its National Day.
  • Argentina returns to the euro bond market after a 15 year absence with a €2.5bn deal that further confirms its position as a darling for fixed income investors. Bankers say the sovereign is also contemplating a Panda bond
  • As Benno Ndulu enters his final year as Tanzania’s central bank governor he tells Emerging Markets that the spread of banking technology throughout his country is his greatest legacy
  • The monetary policies of developed market central banks may be heading in different directions, but the extent to which rate markets can truly diverge is limited, according to the EIB. But the whims of central banks — imagined or otherwise — can still do harm and good to bond markets
  • The last round of IMF lending to developed market countries (before the European sovereign crisis) was 40 years ago — when Britain was locked out of the capital markets and had to go cap in hand to the Fund