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Investors saw plenty of juice in first public AT1 from Chile as regulatory framework draws praise
Mexican lender falls short of bond size target as late 2023 momentum fades
◆ US RMBS sales in Europe: immigration or vacation? ◆ UBS AT1 makes nonsense of claims of investor fears ◆ The EU's last hurrah in the SSA market
◆ IG investors comfort eat sweet spreads ◆ What can FIG issuers do now? ◆ US HEI securitizations: mainstream or flash in pan?
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‘Tier two’ and ‘sustainability’ are labels that have never previously been combined in Asia. At least not until this week, when Kookmin Bank raised $450m from a Basel III-compliant deal.
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UBS welcomed strong demand on Monday for its first ever additional tier one deal in Reg S/144A format, running up an order book of about $10.5bn mid-way through the sales process.
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Bank of China’s Hong Kong-based debt syndicate head Sebastian Ha is leaving the firm next month.
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CNP Assurances came to the market on Friday with a tier two deal, using the bullet format like Assicurzioni Generali did earlier in the week. The issuer chose this structure to get a better price and more investor interest, but one research house suggested that a tier three trade would have made more sense.
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Financial firms from southern Europe raised debt from the capital markets this week, suggesting a thaw in the frosty attitude towards the EU’s weakest lenders. The issuers were able to profit from other banks being in blackout and a feeling that valuations are now too low, writes Jasper Cox.
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