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◆ Deal attracts highest bid-to-cover ratio of the year so far ◆ Extensive marketing helps fuel demand ◆ Pinpointing fair value tricky
◆ First Swissie corporate bond since Alphabet's finds size ◆ Dual tranche trade lands tight ◆ Domestic corporate undersupply helps demand
◆ Issuers opt for extra guidance as market softens ◆ Enexis takes size at six years ◆ DSM-Firmenich lands tight
This week's flurry of deals takes year to date volume beyond £8bn
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The frenetic pace of the high-grade dollar bond market slowed on Thursday as investors showed signs of indigestion.
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Goldman gives new positions to Marsh, Verri and Sorrell — Bain picks ESG boss — Falth turns up at Mizuho
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Avinor, the Norwegian airport and air navigation services company, found enough demand to cover its €500m no-grow trade by six times on Thursday, with the company's 100% state ownership winning over investors.
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Chanel, the French luxury brand, made its debut in the sustainability-linked bond market on Thursday, but the deal found a lacklustre response from investors as question marks hang over demand for high end discretionary spending.
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Medtronic, the US medical devices company, garnered more than €19bn of demand for a €6.25bn six tranche bond issue on Thursday, including a sizeable oversubscription for the 30 year tranche, which some syndicate officials had said might be tough to place.
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New research from analysts at Helaba points to a flight to safety in the Schuldschein market over the course of 2020. Rated issuers are making up a bigger share of deals than they have for a decade, and there have been next to no debuts. Schuldschein arrangers hope this conservative trend does not continue into 2021.