Citi
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World Bank has reopened the 10 year part of the dollar curve, with other public sector issuers keen to follow it into the tenor.
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US banks reporting earnings in the third quarter ubiquitously saw steep upturns in revenues from fixed income trading, despite some seeing overall falls in year over year revenues, as divergences of opinion on the Federal Reserve’s plans for interest rates caused increased trading in bonds.
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A pair of Nordic public sector borrowers showed the strength of green bond market, printing a pair of well received trades, both of which were priced inside the issuers’ conventional bond curves.
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Wall Street’s biggest firms wasted no time hitting the dollar market with total loss absorbing capacity (TLAC) related deals after unveiling a strong recovery in third quarter earnings.
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Poland cemented its position as one of CEE’s most nimble and savvy issuers on Tuesday by printing a 30 year euro deal — only the second ever from a non-Eurozone sovereign — in an opportunistic trade.
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Valmet — Segro — Ecom — Aluminium Bahrain — Morpho
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The World Bank is set to price the largest 10 year dollar benchmark from an SSA since July, as another issuer considered following the supranational into that part of the curve.
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Goldman Sachs showed Europe’s investors were comfortable with callable senior bonds this week, laying the grounds for more US — and eventually European — banks to follow into the total loss absorbing capacity (TLAC) friendly structure.
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Valmet, the Finnish technological services company, has refinanced a €200m facility first signed in May 2013. The company swapped two of the original lenders with new banks.