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At London investor day, supranational reveals deals and plans for new funding and investments, including fully African project financing
Six tranche loan attracts record demand
Bonds of energy importers have sold off, but investors convinced fundamentals are still strong
New methodology follows headroom created by S&P revision last year
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Saudi Electricity Company has signed a $420m loan from Crédit Agricole and Santander as growing domestic funding needs open up more opportunities for international banks.
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National Bank of Abu Dhabi is syndicating a $2bn term loan to replace bilateral loans. The UAE bank is paying more for the longer dated syndicated deal, though the latest pricing is still “aggressive”, according to one banker.
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A HK$4.851bn ($625m) leveraged buyout financing to back the acquisition of Wharf T&T by MBK Partners and TPG Capital has entered limited syndication.
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There has been a relentless downward pressure on the pricing of investment grade loans this year, as lenders choose to preserve the size and quality of their balance sheets even in the face of diminishing returns. Unfortunately, respite from margin compression is not coming any time soon, as volumes remain low and banks’ liquidity and hunger for assets show no signs of abating. Shruti Chaturvedi reports.
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Shangri-La Asia Treasury is seeking retail participants for a $130m borrowing that will refinance existing debt.
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Turkish retail group Boyner has arranged $170m of loans from local and foreign banks. Most of the deal was supplied by international lenders, despite the country having being downgraded to junk this year.