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Corporate Bonds

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◆ Peak demand tops €3.25bn ◆ Deal lands close to fair value ◆ Credit has improved in recent months
◆ Italian issuer pairs two sustainable formats ◆ Trade hits size targets ◆ Tight price tests investors' limits
◆ Yield hunters send Orange's book ballooning ◆ Deal lands through fair value ◆ Corporate hybrid supply doubles year-on-year

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  • The China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) has finalised new rules for the sale of corporate bonds, a move that could boost the attraction of the exchange market while shaking up the operations of credit rating agencies. Addison Gong reports.
  • Indian IT company HCL Technologies sold its first dollar bond on Wednesday, attracting investors with its high rating and established presence overseas.
  • SRI
    The UK’s Budget on Wednesday is likely to go down as the greenest ever, but it still left sustainable finance advocates disappointed, as Rishi Sunak, the chancellor of the exchequer, failed to give clarity on vital programmes and spending, at the beginning of a decade in which the country will have to make vital investments towards achieving its ambition of net zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050.
  • Europe’s high grade corporate investors had their pick of US risk on Wednesday, with a trio of names raising €5.2bn of debt across seven tranches.
  • German commercial real estate company DIC Asset has launched its second Schuldschein, for an initial target of €100m, according to a term sheet distributed to investors. The debt’s margins will be tied to the proportion of green assets the borrower has on its balance sheet. Most notably, there is a ‘fast track’ settlement date for banks needing to secure assets before an ECB funding deadline that falls at the end of this month.
  • Enel, the Italian power and gas company, proved that demand still exists in euros for chunky hybrid debt with a €2.2bn dual tranche deal on Wednesday that saw more than three times oversubscription at peak demand and offered no new issue concession.