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Corporate Bonds

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◆ Books peak above €6.9bn ◆ Pricing competitive to food group peers ◆ Proceeds to refinance outstanding debt
◆ Largest Czech bank tightened spread by 8bp ◆ Subsidiary of Erste Group announced mandate on Monday ◆ 'Arithmetically, there is no FV', a banker said
◆ Second biggest Swiss deal from a foreign borrower ◆ Front end takes the largest bite ◆ International issuance in the currency surges in 2026

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  • A recent lull in dollar bond supply from Indian corporations meant investors rushed to buy REC’s $400m deal on Tuesday, with the electricity company leveraging the demand to price inside of fair value.
  • Korea Gas Corp, a government-owned borrower, found ample support for its dual tranche $800m bond, with demand of more than $5bn during bookbuilding allowing the firm to price the notes around some fair value estimates, and well inside others.
  • SRI
    The European Commission launched on Tuesday a second big wave of regulation that will soon be controlling more aspects of sustainable finance more tightly. There is a tendency to think anything with the word “sustainable” attached to it is good. But capital markets specialists must ask themselves: will the regulations be helpful?
  • Aside from the covered bond market, issuance volumes fell away in most corners of the primary market last week as the markets slow for summer. Although most deals were well subscribed, the average oversubscription ratios in each market struggled to maintain previous levels — a reflection of the tight spreads on offer in FIG and corporate bond markets.
  • American Honda, the North American subsidiary of the Japanese automotive maker, hit screens with a euro benchmark trade on Tuesday, as corporate bankers reckon central bank tinkering will see a rise in Reverse Yankees at the back end of the year.
  • JAB Holdings and Prosus have hired banks to run bond issues, adding to the barrage of corporate deals in the works before Europe's summer break.