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Big deal joins light supply in January
Bankers say deals are still being launched and believe international rivalry can be negotiated
Banks accept some deals will bypass them — others they can intermediate
Sectors shape up as main sources of corporate syndicated lending demand amid renewed geopolitical uncertainty
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Shurgard, one of Europe’s largest self-storage companies, has returned to the US private placement market for the third time, according to market sources. The company is only the second from Europe to launch a PP deal this year.
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Mining Industry Indonesia, a holding company for the government’s stakes in five domestic mining firms, is seeking an up to $750m borrowing from the loan market.
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A number of smaller European banks are trying to buy Schuldscheine on the secondary market, according to sources with knowledge of the situation, in order to post it as collateral to receive cheaper funding from the ECB ahead of a March 31 deadline.
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Cellnex, the acquisition-hungry Spanish telecoms infrastructure company, has hired banks for a multi-tranche bond, continuing a fundraising spree that also includes a €7bn rights issue, announced last week.
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Veolia Environment, the French utility, has launched an all-out attack in its attempt to buy domestic rival Suez, as the acquisitive company looks to bypass Suez’s board in an offer to shareholders that values the target company at €11.3bn. Suez is already claiming that the move has been denied by the courts.
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Cooperative farm supplier Danish Agro has entered the Schuldschein market, after nearly a fortnight has passed with no new issue.