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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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Electrocomponents, a UK electrical and industrial supplies company, has signed a £300m revolving credit facility, increasing the size of the facility being replaced as access to liquidity remains many companies' key consideration.
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Veteran equity analyst and forensic accountant Steve Clapham believes it is stories that drive investment decisions and seldom cold analysis of financial accounts. But he believes it is hard to find a company which isn’t engaged in some level of financial wrongdoing and argues that auditors are blind to it, wilfully or otherwise.
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CPI Property, the Frankfurt listed property owner, has signed a new €700m revolving credit facility, bumping up the size of its main bank line as lenders say liquidity is still a focus for corporates.
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Indian conglomerate Reliance Industries is in talks with banks for its fourth loan this year.
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Mercuria and Gunvor, the Swiss commodity and energy trading firms, have signed credit facilities for their US businesses, with both companies adding more banks to the deals.
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Moody’s has issued a stark warning on the precarious position of corporates if there is another mass outbreak of Covid-19 that slows economic recovery. But senior lenders say the syndicated loan market is once again ready to provide liquidity at short notice.