Most recent/Bond comments/Ad
Most recent/Bond comments/Ad
Most recent
◆ Issuance may be concentrated on Tuesday after a single deal on Monday ◆ Prospects for euro paper brighter than dollars ◆ AT1s in any currency likely to do well in this market
◆ Callable FRN structure is ’positive evolution’ ◆ Longer fixed tranche draws €5.6bn orders ◆ Duration for high quality names still sought
◆ Lender takes advantage of demand for higher yielding FIG names ◆ Completes annual funding and MREL requirements ahead of time ◆ Other lower tier European issuers execute similar deals
Lower funding needs and tight senior spreads supress Aussie dollar covered supply
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European financial institutions — already facing a narrow issuance window over the next couple of weeks — must also navigate renewed rates volatility
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◆ Volatility spikes across markets and asset classes ◆ Citi differentiates from peers by funding at short end too ◆ Amex shows demand for FIG bonds as it issues senior and subordinated debt with negative NIP
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◆ Order book halves after ‘aggressive’ tightening ◆ Bankers away say deal came through fair value ◆ FRN bid 'strong'
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◆ Achmea proves appetite for higher beta tier two ◆ HCB senior preferred 3.6 times covered ◆ 'Senior issuance is still working'
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Cypriot lender's debut green bond emulates similar deals
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◆ Investors look to pick up spread through subordination rather than stay safe in senior ◆ Credit Mutuel's insurance arm brings deal ◆ But price on Crelan's 10 times covered tier two causes consternation
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◆ Attrition in order books ◆ Investors question valuations amid concerns about new issues underperforming ◆ Pipeline is ‘busy-ish’ and market ‘pretty constructive’
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Buying the bond at a premium to parent RBI is a 'no-brainer', according to a lead manager
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Investors are ready to embrace unsecured bank debt yet again — but at double digit new issue concessions
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◆ Money centre banks drive $25bn-plus three-day issuance rush ◆ Goldman first refinances capital with new, cheaper deal and then returns for senior funding ◆ RBC debuts its most subordinated debt in US dollars
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◆ Senior FRNs in euros appear more cost-efficient for issuers than covered bonds ◆ Savings vary by issuer ◆ Asset mangers prefer to buy from higher-rated FRN issuers