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New methodology follows headroom created by S&P revision last year
Deal has two tranches, company last came to market in 2024
Hatzinger had been Agricole's head of loans for Dach
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Singaporean commodities company Trafigura has returned to the loan market for its annual borrowing, seeking a $1bn-equivalent dual-currency deal.
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Hipgnosis, the UK intellectual property and song management company, has again increased the size of its revolving credit facility since first signing it earlier this year, weeks after the firm raised £236m through an equity raise.
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Royal Vopak, the Dutch oil and gas storage company, has sold $500m-equivalent in US private placements.
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Weir Group, the UK engineering company, earned a favourable mention from Moody’s weeks after signing a new syndicated loan, as corporate debt markets brace themselves for a wave of downgrades.
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Drinks bottler Refresco is targeting a €400m term loan 'B' deal intended to finance acquisitions in Europe and the US.
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Several companies boasting Big Four accounting firms as auditors have emerged as fraudulent, leading many to wonder what value auditors bring to an investors' understanding of a company. The big issue is that auditors have little obligation to detect fraud at companies they audit, and neither it seems does anyone else. Until they do, investors need to stop believing a Big Four sign-off is a seal of approval. In fact, for a system supposedly built with its own reputation in mind, developed markets have offered investors very little protection.
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