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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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Snam, the Italian gas pipeline company, and Swedish ball bearing maker SKF kicked the week’s corporate bond new issuance off in Europe on Monday, with deals that offered razor-thin spreads from the start.
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Cellnex, the acquisition-hungry Spanish telecoms infrastructure company, has hired banks for a multi-tranche bond, continuing a fundraising spree that also includes a €7bn rights issue, announced last week.
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Veolia Environment, the French utility, has launched an all-out attack in its attempt to buy domestic rival Suez, as the acquisitive company looks to bypass Suez’s board in an offer to shareholders that values the target company at €11.3bn. Suez is already claiming that the move has been denied by the courts.
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Cooperative farm supplier Danish Agro has entered the Schuldschein market, after nearly a fortnight has passed with no new issue.
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Jinchuan Group Co, a state-owned enterprise from China's Gansu province, made its debut in the international market on Thursday with a $280m bond.
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Under its new "Strategy 2024" plan, Commerzbank is considering outsourcing equities services to a partner as several rivals have done. It also wants to focus its equity capital markets and M&A franchises more squarely on existing clients.