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◆ US tech firm prints largest ever sterling corporate deal with monster book ◆ Ultra rare and ultra long 100 year finds demand ◆ Giant deal lands close to dollar funding cost
◆ German chipmaker takes €2bn with five, eight and 11 year deal ◆ Curve's shape contributes to strong outcome ◆ Real estate firm Balder lands flat long five year
US hyperscaler plans to print 17 tranches, including a rare 100 year sterling note, across three currencies
Hyperscaler earnings could become a crucial date for issuance funding calendars
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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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UK listed construction materials manufacturer Breedon has closed £250m-equivalent worth of US private placements in euros and sterling, according to market sources.
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LG Chem got an $8.5bn final book for a $1bn dual-tranche green bond this week, with the deal pricing through some fair value estimates and ending the South Korean chemical company's two year hiatus from the debt market.
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Chinese local government financing vehicle Linyi City Construction Investment Group Co nabbed $300m from an offshore bond on Monday.
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Volkswagen Financial Services on Monday became the latest company to print a sterling bond through its euro curve, but supply for sterling investors is expected to remain limited.