Credit Suisse
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Dingdong (Cayman), a Chinese e-commerce company for fresh groceries, and its rival Missfresh are testing investor appetite at the same time for their US IPOs.
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Gazprom is set to access the Swiss franc market this week to sell its first trade in the currency for over three years.
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GN Store Nord, a Danish hearing aid maker, has signed a €350m revolving credit facility, pulling syndicated and bilateral lines into one deal.
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General Atlantic-owned Indian healthcare group Krishna Institute of Medical Sciences (Kims) has raised around Rp21.4bn ($288m) from a nearly four times subscribed IPO.
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Biopharmaceutical company HutchMed (China) kicked off the roadshow for its HK$4.68bn ($602.7m) Hong Kong IPO on Friday, placing more than half of the shares in its third listing with cornerstone investors.
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A reverse enquiry from an institutional investor drove Raiffeisen to reopen its Swiss franc additional tier one (AT1) note this week, which was bumped up even further by demand from retail buyers.
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Philippine real estate investment trust MReit filed for IPO approval this week. It is targeting up to Ps27.3bn ($562.3m), which would make it the country’s largest Reit listing.
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South Korean video game developer Krafton has set in motion an IPO of nearly $5bn, set to be the country’s largest ever listing — and the first of many chunky deals expected in the second half of the year. Jonathan Breen reports.
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Tyre manufacturer Gajah Tunggal had to battle weak sentiment around Indonesian credits to sell a $175m bond this week.
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Credit Suisse’s investment bankers are looking to its top ranks for an injection of belief in the future of the business, following cuts to the bonus pool and defections from those with less patience, writes David Rothnie.