Lloyds Bank
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UK real estate investment trust Segro has sold €300m 10 and 15 year US private placement (PP) notes, to a group of institutional investors.
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European banks have taken full advantage of a window for issuance after second quarter results, with Lloyds Banking Group becoming the latest name to test the depth of the dollar market in the middle of summer.
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A financial institutions debt capital markets banker at Lloyds Bank is moving over to the syndicate desk.
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Colin Withers left ING’s EM and high yield syndicate last week after seven years at the bank and shortly before Uzair Burney, a high yield syndicate official from Lloyds, is set to join the desk.
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Connect Plus (M25), the project company that manages the M25 motorway around London, has priced its first public bond issue, for £893m, to unwind interest rate swaps from 2009 and refinance part of a £1bn loan.
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Toyota’s Australian finance arm ended a 14 year hiatus from issuing bonds in sterling this week when it sold the first sterling corporate bond of the second half of 2018. The breadth of the sterling investor community was evident in the order book, but the depth was not.
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UK retailer J Sainsbury’s has signed a £3.5bn loan package to back its acquisition of Walmart-owned Asda, with the company raising more debt than the cash component of the deal despite analysts raising concerns about the borrower’s recent debt levels.
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Car manufacturer Toyota’s Australian finance arm ended a 14 year hiatus from issuing bonds in sterling when it sold the first sterling corporate bond of the second half of 2018. The return of such an issuer will help fuel optimism that issuance in the currency in the second half of the year may help to redress the balance after one of the lowest volumes of first half issuance in the last decade.
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Two borrowers, Marlink and Iris Software, offered a string of new medium sized leveraged loans this week, following the recent launch of some highly anticipated jumbo deals that sources say have helped renew investor interest in the European market.
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British oil and gas company BP returned to the European corporate bond markets on Thursday for the first time in a year. Two euro tranches came 12 months after the company’s last euro offering, and a sterling tranche was its first in its domestic currency since August 2016.
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British oil and gas company BP returned to the European corporate bond markets on Thursday for the first time in a year. Two euro tranches came twelve months after the company’s last euro offering, and a sterling tranche was its first in its domestic currency since August 2016.
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The UK’s Porterbrook has signed £885m in bank financing from a syndicate of 11 lenders, with Moody’s giving the rolling stock company’s senior debt a Baa2 rating.