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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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  • Deutsche Bahn rolled into the Swedish krona market this week to sell its biggest non-euro deal since 2012.
  • The financing for the Issa brothers and TDR Capital’s buyout of Asda was priced on Wednesday, breaking multiple records in the process and showing that, for the right issuer in the right conditions, the sterling market can shoulder the bulk of a multi-billion LBO package. Owen Sanderson reports.
  • Pension Insurance Corp (PIC) has given Livin Housing a further £30m of private placement funding, after lending the housing association in England’s County Durham £65m in April 2019. Market participants have told GlobalCapital that several other housing associations are readying private placement deals for the next few months.
  • RBC Capital Markets has become the 12th bank to join DirectBooks, a platform which aims to streamline the communications processes in the issuance of corporate bonds.
  • India’s well-established renewable energy companies have long been known for selling green bonds, but this week showed that new issuers are ready to join the fray — not just with green deals, but also with sustainability-linked transactions. Morgan Davis reports.
  • Six Chinese companies sold Rmb6.4bn ($994m) of ‘carbon neutrality bonds’ this week, supporting Beijing’s goal of net zero carbon dioxide emissions by 2060. The format could lead to a spike in international investor interest in China’s debt market. Addison Gong reports.