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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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  • Though both Schuldscheine and US private placements are suffering from droughts of European deals, many of the larger investors in these markets are not too parched. Having used these markets as footholds to develop corporate relationships, they are now keeping deals flowing bilaterally.
  • Sage Group, the UK business software company, is expected to bring a 10 year sterling trade on Thursday, as syndicate bankers say the dribble of deals seen this week looks like it will be the standard for the rest of the month.
  • Software company Iqvia had the euro high yield market almost to itself this week, as last Friday’s go-stale deadline slowed the frantic issuance which has characterised the year so far. As a double-B unsecured credit targeting pricing in the 2s, it was a punchy deal, but the result exceeded the issuer's expectations.
  • SRI
    Apart from a few avant-garde programmes and players, green finance has only recently begun to be noticed in the short term debt markets, but that looks set to change rapidly. GlobalCapital spoke to Thomas Callahan, head of BlackRock’s global cash management business, about how he expects green commercial paper and ESG investing to develop.
  • Pakistan’s Water and Power Development Authority (Wapda) is planning to sell its debut dollar bond in late March, in what would be a rare international corporate outing from the country.
  • The Hong Kong regulator’s plan to overhaul the bookbuilding and allocation process for equity and bond deals has some worthy goals. But it is unnecessary for a market that has proven able to clean its own house.