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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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Banco Popular Español postponed the sale of its second additional tier one (AT1) deal after launching the deal into a sell-off in the AT1 market that became progressively worse over the course of the morning. The Spanish bank was looking to sell the transaction at a level market participants said was surprisingly aggressive.
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Following its successful $2.1bn flotation last week — the biggest European intial public offering this year — NN Group is set to sell a subordinated perpetual non-call 12 year debt that will rank pari passu with the 4.625% €1bn 30 year non-call 10 transaction that the insurance company sold in April.
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In a direct illustration of how far the additional tier one market, and yields on both subordinated debt and that of the European periphery's financial institutions, has come, Banco Popular Español is looking to issue an additional tier one with a coupon likely to be five points lower than where it priced an AT1 deal less than a year ago.
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Dutch insurer NN Group is likely to hit the subordinated debt market later this week with a euro deal, its second of the year, mandating banks on Monday for an investor call. The investor update follows the issuer’s listing on the Amsterdam stock exchange last week.
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German commercial and housing property lender Aareal Bank is looking to issue around €300m of new-style additional tier one capital and is hoping to get the deal done before the end of July.
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BNP Paribas is in no rush to issue new style additional tier one capital, said chief financial officer Lars Machenil, with the bank taking a record-setting $8.97bn fine on the chin on Tuesday. The fine for helping clients evade US sanctions will trim the bank’s fully loaded common equity tier one ratio by 60bp to 10%, still higher than many of its European competitors.