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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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West China Cement returned to the bond market this week after an absence of nearly seven years to raise $600m.
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Four Chinese local government financing vehicles courted dollar investors on Tuesday, raising $870m between them.
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Repsol, the Spanish petrochemicals company, made its first foray into sustainability-linked bonds on Tuesday, though some of the power was taken out of the deal by investors judging the level too tight for a triple-B rated issuer.
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The European Central Bank has surely bought too many corporate bonds. When even the treasurers at some of the biggest beneficiaries are complaining about the market warping effects of the policy, can it really still be fit for purpose?
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The flurry in European leveraged credit supply continues this week, as trigger-happy investors push for deals further down the credit curve amid record low levels of corporate distress.
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Finely tuned pricing was the order of the primary market last week, with a drop in volatility leading to a decline in average movements from initial price thoughts. But despite the VIX falling to its lowest level since February 2020, there were still signs of price sensitivity — and average new issue concessions grew in the most affected markets.
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