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Europe gets first large, general corporate revolving credit facility labelled green
Team led by Jenny Edwards hires more than 20 professionals for its April launch
Commerzbank arranges $1.1bn deal for supply of vital raw materials
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The synthetic risk transfer market helped some of Europe’s biggest banks dodge loan losses last year, with Barclays saving more than £300m and Deutsche at least €150m. But the backdrop last year led to investors taking a tougher line on writing new credit protection, steering clear of pools with limited disclosure and hoping to dodge the most damaged sectors.
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McColl’s, the UK retailer, has amended and extended £167.5m of bank debt in part to relax covenant requirements, as banks are still being called upon to be lenient with borrowers a year after the coronavirus pandemic started.
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Intermediate Capital Group Enterprise Trust, a UK private equity investor, has signed a €200m loan facility, a month after the company’s parent refinanced its sterling facility.
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Singapore real estate company United Industrial Corp has raised a $300m loan comprising both green and sustainability-linked tranches, adding further momentum to the nascent asset class in Asia.
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Glenveagh Properties, the Irish house builder, has signed a €250m bank line to refinance debt due in April, adding to its lending group in the process.
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Soltec, a Spanish solar tracker company, has refinanced its main syndicated bank loan, almost doubling the size of its bank facilities four months after the company publicly listed.
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