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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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  • Virgin Media 02, the joint venture of Virgin Media and O2, has sold £1.13bn-equivalent of sterling and dollar notes, refinancing a set of bank loans signed ahead of the 50:50 merger, which finally closed earlier this month.
  • Air France-KLM is preparing to return to public funding markets, as the group comes off life support and contemplates its post-pandemic capital structure, bloated by €10bn of state aid measures during 2020. The airline has been marketing a €600m dual tranche three and five year issue, which is set to be priced on Thursday, as it predicts running at over 60%-65% of 2019 capacity during the summer.
  • The green dim sum bond market saw a small jump in action on Tuesday, with high yield issuer Zhenro Properties Group selling a short-dated deal and German development bank KfW reopening one of its existing notes.
  • Singaporean logistics company GLP used a subordinated perpetual bond structure to raise $300m of green funds this week.
  • Vattenfall, the Swedish electricity company, powered through its euro hybrid capital funding levels with a debut sterling green hybrid this week, as the sterling market continues to provide ample support for borrowers.
  • LEG Immobilien, the German housing company, has mandated for its debut sustainability bond. Bond market participants expecting sizeable demand for it, despite the recent deluge of property deals.