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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
New twist in Hollywood acquisition as Netflix adds $5bn revolver and $20bn of term loans
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Iberdrola, the Spanish utility, has signed a €2.5bn sustainability-linked loan, becoming the first Spanish company to use risk-free rates as a benchmark instead of Libor.
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Commodity trader Trafigura has sold US private placements, according to market sources, in its sixth issuance in the market.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.