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Investors saw plenty of juice in first public AT1 from Chile as regulatory framework draws praise
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  • India broke with its traditional instincts last week by scrapping a restriction on retail investors buying Basel III bonds. Not only is the U-turn in attitude towards retail protection startling given the country's past attitude to that investor base, but it could also be reckless.
  • The subordinated debt market for European financials was back in full swing with four deals out on Monday morning boosted by the European Central Bank's policy decisions made last week.
  • Santander and UniCredit reopened the door to the additional tier one market this week only to find what lay behind it was a very different dynamic from the one borrowers experienced before summer. An expected burst of supply is on the way and historically low coupons are causing investors to shy away from the AT1 from major European banks.
  • Swiss Re drew an almost four times oversubscribed order book for a debut dated dollar subordinated debt issue on Thursday. The deal showed that appetite for sub debt remains robust among investors, even following starkly reduced demand for additional tier one paper deals from Santander and UniCredit earlier this week.
  • Swiss Re drew an almost four times oversubscribed order book for its debut dated dollar sub print on Thursday, with leads pricing the deal inside of initial price thoughts. The deal shows that appetite for sub debt remains robust among investors, even following starkly reduced demand in the market for additional tier one paper for prints from Santander and UniCredit earlier this week.
  • Indian banks got a huge helping hand from the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on September 1 after the regulator relaxed its Basel III guidelines to drive up interest in bank capital issuance.