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Syndicated Loans

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After quitting M&A and equity capital markets in Europe and the US last year, HSBC is striving to maintain global relevance — and London and New York still have a role to play
Despite the allure of lower loan prices, CLO managers should print deals cautiously
Software loan sell-offs and the Iran war have caused US and European loans to price differently
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  • Vietnam’s VNDirect Securities Corp has tapped the offshore loan market for the first time for a $50m borrowing.
  • Acciona, the Spanish infrastructure company, has signed ESG-linked bank lines totalling €3.3bn, as it prepares to float its renewable energy subsidiary Acciona Energía in the coming weeks.
  • Investment firm China Renaissance Holdings has closed its debut offshore borrowing of $300m.
  • The Asia Pacific Loan Market Association, a trade body, has appointed Pedro Cheung as its new chairman.
  • Three unprecedented events this week — a landmark court ruling against Shell and shareholder revolts at Chevron and ExxonMobil — signalled that investors and society at large have rejected the oil industry’s early attempts at joining the low carbon transition and are looking for much more radical action. Oil majors retain good access to capital markets, but the clock is ticking. Jon Hay reports.
  • HICL Infrastructure and JLEN Environmental Assets, two London-listed infrastructure funds, this week signed ESG-linked loans that use Sonia instead of Libor. But loans bankers are still worried about the large number of deals that have not moved away from Libor, which falls out of use on December 31.