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Syndicated Loans

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◆ Fast money reverses out of SSA bond market ◆ CLO managers face risky ramp startegy ◆ Corporate hybrid bond market runs hot despite volatility
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
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  • DIC Asset, the German commercial real estate company, has sold €250m worth of Schuldscheine. The debt’s margin is tied to the sustainability of the borrower’s property portfolio.
  • French train lessor Akiem has issued €290m of green US private placements, joining the likes of LondonMetric, Montea and King's College in drawing the market further into green and sustainable finance.
  • Coats, the UK industrial thread producer, has signed a $360m loan, adding environmental, social and governance metrics to its bank debt for the first time.
  • China National Chemical Corp (ChemChina) is raising multiple bilateral loans worth about $3.85bn to refinance a deal maturing in early May, ditching syndication in favour of one-on-one agreements with banks. But while the cost benefits may be appealing, such an approach by borrowers is unlikely to be sustainable in the longer run. Pan Yue reports.
  • Russian steelmaker Metalloinvest has secured a $350m credit line from international lenders. Metalloinvest is the second Russian corporate to tap international lenders since fresh sanctions were announced against Russia by the United States.
  • UK gym chain Virgin Active’s restructuring could set a precedent for restructurings of UK retailers. Dozens of retailers have used ‘CVA’ processes to cut their debt burdens, which typically hits their landlords hard but leaves other creditors unscathed. Virgin Active is instead using the new UK ‘super scheme’ restructuring law introduced last year to try to bind landlords and other creditors alike into accepting writedowns.