Citi
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Bank of India (BOI) is back in the dollar bond market on Tuesday, April 28, breaking two years of silence.
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UFO Moviez has pressed the play button on its Rp6.125bn ($96m) Indian IPO, starting the bookbuilding process on April 28. The deal has already seen some strong names coming in as anchor investors, but volatility in the secondary market is creating a big distraction to investors.
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South Korea’s Shinsegae Group has picked a sole bookrunner as it gears up for a comeback to the international bond market after a hiatus of almost eight years. Pre-marketing for a new 30 year non call five is due to kick off next week.
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Indonesian port operator Pelabuhan Indonesia II (Pelindo II) made a splash with its inaugural outing in the international bond market, raising $1.6bn from a tightly priced dual-tranche offering split between 10 and 30 year trades.
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Korea Resources Corp (KoRes) successfully returned to the dollar bond market on April 23 with its safe haven status drawing solid demand. But the state owned enterprise shied away from increasing the size of the deal due to the government pressure to reduce debt.
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A first three year dollar benchmark from World Bank in several years won universal acclaim this week. But, more importantly, it showed the potential of a new bid from the US.
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European Investment Bank’s first five year Kangaroo deal for more than a year attracted strong interest from Asian investors this week.
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The post earnings supply deluge continued this week as Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and Wells Fargo all hit the US bond market.
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Supranational lender Africa Finance Corp’s Wednesday debut was a “massive exercise in price discovery,” said bankers on the trade. But one that ended with the right spread and an increased deal size on the back of strong demand.
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Nationwide Building Society this week priced its first sterling covered bond of 2015 following an earlier euro covered bond, a multi-currency RMBS and two senior deals issued already this year.
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Supranational lender Africa Finance Corp’s Wednesday debut was a “massive exercise in price discovery,” said bankers on the trade. But one that ended with the right spread and an increased deal size on the back of strong demand.