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Emerging Market Loans

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  • A HK$5.5bn ($708m)-equivalent loan to partly refinance debt taken for investment manager Permira’s leveraged buyout of Tricor Holdings is now open to existing lenders in syndication.
  • An innovative collaboration between six organisations from different sectors has led to the creation of the Subnational Climate Finance Initiative, which will work with local governments in developing countries to fund green infrastructure. The scheme highlights the value — but also the difficulty — of blended finance.
  • Despite the disruption that the coronavirus pandemic and, more recently, volatility in global markets have brought to emerging market debt, issuers in the CEEMEA region are not backing away from their pivot towards ESG financing. Though concerns about greenwashing are holding the market back, new sustainability-linked and transition structures are tempting issuers.
  • Indonesian multi-finance companies are ready to charge back into the loan market after a quiet 2020, as the country’s economy picks up and consumer sentiment improves. Banks are also ready to accept borrowers from the sector, but there are challenges ahead, writes Pan Yue.
  • Indonesian non-bank financial institution Chandra Sakti Utama Leasing has launched a $75m loan into general syndication, with bankers expecting the firm’s modest rise in non-performing loans versus peers to hold it in good stead.
  • Chinese property developer Shui On Land has returned to the loan market after a break of two years. It is seeking a $200m borrowing.