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◆ Japanese firm guides debut euro deal tight ◆ Endeavour attracts strong demand ◆ Sales follow multi-day marketing exercises
Geopolitics takes a back seat as earnings season weighs on euro corporate supply
Attractive spreads available as Air Liquide lines up Swiss franc debut
Life science, utilities and industrials dominate supply after big tech's big splurge
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Korea East-West Power Co (EWP) offered no new issue concession for its $500m bond on Monday, but still drew orders of close to $4bn. Its notes only tightened further in the secondary market, showing investors’ support for quality borrowers.
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Pernod Ricard, the French drinks company, was rewarded for waiting on Monday when it launched taps of existing bonds more than 50bp inside where it had originally priced the notes just weeks ago, showing just what a tonic the European Central Bank's asset purchasing has been for the corporate bond market during the coronavirus pandemic.
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US companies Amphenol Technologies and Air Products and Chemicals have mandated banks for euro bond issues, as bankers expect Reverse Yankee issuance to rise after a spell of record-breaking volume in the dollar market.
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PSA International, a Singaporean port operator, raised $650m from a 10 year bond that appealed to investors because of its strong credentials.
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The corporate bond market has returned to some semblance of normality, with Switzerland’s Firmenich and Australia’s APA Group taking the traditional route of holding a roadshow before opening books, and syndicate bankers say the wild, record-breaking weeks for primary issuance are over for now.
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Europe’s banks sniff opportunities amid the crisis as they look to build out their corporate broking businesses, but they will face fights to remove incumbents, writes David Rothnie.