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SSA
Where do investors look when JGBs and USTs are no longer reliable?
Better to pay a new issue premium now than risk facing spread blowout
Asian buyers driving callable SSA market have resurfaced in public benchmark deals
Public sector issuers have become more flexible when executing cross-currency interest rate swaps
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  • Nordea announced on Wednesday that it was moving its headquarters from Sweden, where it has been since it was formed through a series of mergers in 2000, to Finland, where it will be supervised by the European Central Bank, as part of the ‘Banking Union’ arrangements.
  • It is not unusual to hear DCM bankers on sterling deals talk about the sophisticated nature of the investor base. Issuers on roadshows also often say they feel they have the best dialogues with UK-based investors, who have often done their credit work before meetings and want to discuss details in more depth than the usual page turning of an investor presentation deck.
  • Noble Group, the Hong Kong commodities trading firm, is in financial difficulties, but is still functioning — just.
  • SSA issuers cannot be blamed for taking advantage this week of a chance to fund with so many things to worry about on the horizon. But this most orderly of markets could see issuers locking horns over who prints when.
  • With a flurry of fanfare the Schuldscheinbörse Deutschland — the first attempt at a secondary market for Schuldschein loans — launched on the exchange floors of Hamburg and Hanover.
  • Since the European Central Bank commenced its quantitative easing programmes in 2009 investors have been complaining about the smaller allocations of bonds they have been receiving in new issues. This has been felt most acutely since corporate bonds were included in the programme from March 2016.