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Distinction in Europe’s corporate bond market is not a bad thing
Corporates take advantage of investor inflows and strong demand as supply edges closer to an all-time monthly high
Explicitly guaranteed Dutch utility company expected to trade tighter against govvie and agency peers
Poste will not borrow for the cash component
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H&M, the Swedish clothing retail company, has received blowout demand for its debut bond, as the “perfect storm” of ESG criteria and European Central Bank rule changes to allow it to buy sustainability-linked bonds saw the order book bulge to almost 11 times subscribed at guidance.
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WP Carey, the US REIT, has mandated for a euro bond through its Dutch subsidiary, as Europe’s syndicate bankers say that there are signs in the rates market that Reverse Yankees could become a popular choice again.
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Charlie Jacobs, senior partner and chairman at law firm Linklaters, is set to become co-head of UK investment banking at JP Morgan.
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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.
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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.
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H&M, the Swedish fashion company, has sold a sustainability-linked security for its debut outing in the bond markets. This is an encouraging step, but the fashion industry has a lot more work to do to clean up its look.