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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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  • FIG
    A spectacular spectrum of FIG issuers stormed into the bond markets this week as the European Central Bank’s latest round of stimulus squeezed spreads tighter and investors finally caved in to the bulging pipeline of deals. With Easter fast approaching, there is little sign of issuance slowing, writes Tyler Davies.
  • ABN Amro became the first foreign lender to issue a tier two bond in Taiwan’s Formosa market following a change in rules at the start of the year.
  • Shinhan Bank is looking to tie up its first tier two bond in the international market, launching an up to $500m offering on Thursday.
  • Commerzbank launched a €1bn 10 year tier two transaction first marketed in January on Wednesday, as investors continued to commit in large numbers to new subordinated bank debt offerings.
  • FIG
    There has been €6.5bn of euro FIG supply across most asset classes in the first two sessions this week, with issuers riding a turnaround in sentiment after the European Central Bank announced more monetary stimulus last week.
  • Regulators and politicians have suddenly found the will to defend the additional tier one market — a market they created — from the violent shocks it experienced early this year. In particular, they want to give AT1 investors some reassurance about skipped coupons.