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Global head of funding Andrea Dore on this week's sterling and dollar transactions
◆ IDA prints 'rare seven year' and gets big demand ◆ IDA premium debated ◆ KfW targets 'popular' short end
◆ Lack of supply a factor ◆ Slim premium paid ◆ Domestic accounts accustomed to Gilt volatility and headlines
Texas utility securitizes recovery charges permitted after Thunderstorm Derecho
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The momentum behind green equity capital markets built further this week in the UK, with the latest deal from Greencoat UK Wind and the opening of books on the London flotation of NextEnergy Renewables, the solar power company.
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Despite a modest recovery in oil markets after an unprecedentedly volatile period last year, hydrocarbon-dependent emerging market governments are being warned to diversify urgently, amid estimations that a multi-trillion dollar revenue gap looms over some of the most vulnerable oil exporters. Capital markets must play a critical role in that transformation, say industry experts.
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FortiFi Financial is returning to the market with the first property assessed clean energy (PACE) deal of the year. It is also the first time FortiFi, formerly known as Energy Efficient Equity (E3) is issuing under its new name.
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European investors have wholeheartedly embraced the EU’s Next Generation EU programme and piled into risky assets in anticipation of a swifter recovery. But rating agencies are less convinced, warning that only the substance and implementation of national recovery plans will determine the trajectory of European growth.
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Greencoat Renewables, the Irish wind farm fund, has made an acquisition of around €60m acquisition in Finland, a few months after the company sold equity to free up debt for purchases.
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This week in Keeping Tabs: an opportunity for the UK's finance sector after Brexit, and an argument for why you shouldn't worry about the stock market.