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Standard Chartered

  • Huawei Investment & Holding Co wrapped up Asia’s first G3 bond from the technology sector this year, pricing its notes through fair value. It plans to become a regular issuer in the capital markets to diversify its funding.
  • Chinese property developer Yanlord Land Group is poised to return to the loan syndications market with a $600m deal that will refinance a $385m borrowing raised in 2014.
  • Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC) and Bank of Communications (BoCom), enjoyed success with their decision to jump on the floating rate note (FRN) bandwagon on Monday, via their Hong Kong branches. The former bagged $2bn from a triple-tranche offering and the latter $850m from a three year floater.
  • China’s Huawei Investment & Holding Co is set to become the first G3 bond issuer from the technology sector in Asia this year, taking bids for a dual-trancher on Tuesday morning. Meanwhile, property developer Ronshine China Holdings is back to tap its 2019s.
  • The Greater China debt market started the week in full force, with Bank of Communications, ICBC and Road King Infrastructure opening books on Monday.
  • China’s Huawei Investment & Holding Co is gauging investor appetite for its third international bond, having picked five banks to work on the transaction.
  • The list of investors that came aboard a $69m loan for Air India has been revealed. The company launched general syndication in October and brought in new lenders at the end of last year.
  • Despite lingering concerns about its foreign exchange rate regime, Nigeria’s return to the bond market drew an impressive $7.8bn book. So insatiable was demand that the deal dragged the whole sub-Saharan Africa market tighter in secondaries paving the way for some much missed supply from the sector, writes Virginia Furness.
  • China Grand Automotive is in the market for a $591m equivalent dual currency syndicated loan. The deal comes less than two months after it raised funds from a bond issue.
  • Nigeria’s 15 year bondlooked to be going strongly on Thursday, with investors piling $4.5bn of orders into the book by lunchtime.
  • Nigeria impressed on its roadshow this week but concerns about the country’s FX regime have resulted in a wide range of feedback for pricing from investors.
  • China Grand Automotive is looking for a $591m equivalent syndicated loan facility, less than two months after it raised funds from the bond market.