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Despite being the busiest January for 16 years, deal execution proved strong
◆ 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
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Royal Dutch Shell was on the receiving end of a landmark court ruling last week that will compel the company to take profound climate change mitigation action. Not that you’d know from Shell’s bond curve. Time for fixed income investors to pull their heads out of the oil sand.
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Europe’s corporate bond market was again dominated by ESG trades on Tuesday but the influx of green and socially conscious deals in recent weeks means that investors have become increasingly picky about what they buy.
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Qingdao Jiaozhou Bay Development Group Co, a local government financing vehicle from China's Shandong province, printed a $200m deal this week as it prepares to tackle an imminent bond maturity.
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A large sell-off over the past two months in the dollar bonds of embattled China Huarong Asset Management took a turn last week, as news around the firm’s financial health buoyed secondary market performance.
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Shandong Finance Investment Group Co sold its first dollar bond this week. Its $500m deal was heavily supported by a large syndicate team.
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Europe’s high grade corporate market this week saw one of its busiest days of the year, with a touch over €4.5bn printed from eight tranches on Wednesday, and investors lapped up most of the deals with ease.