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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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Market observers believe that investors in open-ended debt funds need to be disincentivised more than they are at present from scrambling to liquidate their holdings in a market downturn.
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Europe’s high grade corporate market continued to offer plenty of demand for riskier structures this week, with multiple hybrids again taking up screen space.
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Royal Schiphol, the Dutch airport operator, brought a dual tranche conventional and green bond with a small to flat new issue premium on Tuesday. The issuer opted to make the longer 12 year tranche green, which bankers say is indicative of lengthening maturities in the typically mid-tenor corporate green bond market.
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Once Schuldschein market darlings, auto parts suppliers are beginning to look to lenders like they may be in distress. Some fear a wave of credit restructurings on the horizon, when the market's lean documentation standards are likely to be tested.
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Shell, the oil and gas major, visited the sterling bond market for the first time for around six years on Thursday, printing £1bn of long maturity debt and creating a curve out to 2052.
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Daimler blasted far through its conventional bond curve with its €1bn debut green deal on Thursday, in a first for the European automotive industry that is expected to herald a spate of similar issuance — and could reset expectations about the difference between green and conventional bond pricing.