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◆ 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
Tech giant's meditation on permanence offered investors a juicy a pick-up for taking just a little more duration risk
Disney joins tech giant with first dollar deal in over five years
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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.
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JP Morgan and Morgan Stanley’s positions at the top of the UK corporate broking rankings have undoubtedly helped their equity capital markets businesses, but Goldman Sachs stands out for its disruptive approach, writes David Rothnie.
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The standard maturity for European investment grade corporate loans has been reduced from five years to three in the wake of the coronavirus crisis, and senior lenders say they are eager to try and maintain the new shorter maturity.