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ANZ

  • The World Bank eschewed core markets beset by volatility in favour of the Kauri market, tapping a 3.5% January 2021 line for a record-breaking NZ$875m ($615.1m).
  • Louis Dreyfus Commodities Asia is seeking a $500m revolver and is offering the same pricing as it did on its last loan. This is despite its parent's income before tax having halved in 2015, compared with the previous year.
  • Samvardhana Motherson Automotive Systems Group finally broke India's high yield silence, printing the first trade in over a year. Market participants expect the success of the deal to encourage more Indian HY names to sell bonds the second half of the year.
  • FIG
    Credit Suisse took advantage of highly favourable funding conditions to take out $2bn as it took a further step towards meeting its total loss-absorbing capacity (TLAC) requirements.
  • ANZ became the first Australia-based bank to launch a foreign currency additional tier one (AT1) this week, attracting a blowout book for the $1.5bn trade.
  • Ooredoo, the Qatar telecoms company, formerly Qtel, is roadshowing a dollar benchmark via eight banks, potentially adding to increased bond supply from the country, which already stands at seven times the full year total for 2015.
  • FIG
    The FIG market played host to the first contractually bail-inable senior deal this week, as a trio of borrowers broke new ground in loss-absorbing debt markets.
  • The Asian ex-Japan high yield bond market received a boost on Wednesday with Samvardhana Motherson Automotive Systems Group and Xuzhou Economic and Technology Development Zone State-Owned Assets Management (Xuzhou ETDZ) opening books for their dollar debuts.
  • ANZ became the first Australian bank to launch a foreign currency additional tier one (AT1) on Tuesday with a dollar trade, and could target yield hungry Asian accounts to bolster its books.
  • The popularity of China’s marquee technology firms is showing no signs of abating, with both Tencent Holdings and Baidu increasing the size of their borrowings following bumper responses.
  • After five months of silence, corporate issuers have returned to the Kangaroo bond market as pent up demand provides a ready home for paper.
  • Abu Dhabi's Mubadala has tightened the margin on its $1.75bn three year refinancing, despite the price on the original loan already being “eye-wateringly low”, according to one banker.