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High grade and crossover bonds

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◆ Deal spans euros, sterling and dollars ◆ Wide range of US TMT comps used ◆ Slim premiums needed for euro tranches
◆ Telecoms firm takes €1.5bn ◆ Some premium needed at the long end ◆ Demand highest for shortest tranche
◆ 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
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  • Petroliam Nasional (Petronas) stunned the bond market this week with a $6bn deal that received $37bn of orders at its peak. The Malaysian oil and gas company had to navigate volatile oil prices, a ratings outlook change and the Covid-19 pandemic, writes Morgan Davis.
  • UK budget airline EasyJet has signed two new term loans totalling around £400m ($497.37m) and drawn down on an existing revolver as the airline industry, battered by the coronavirus pandemic, continues to slash costs and build capital in the hope of seeing landing lights after the storm passes.
  • High grade corporate bond investors piled into new deals again on Wednesday, with American Honda paying a lower than average new issue premium and Givaudan taking almost €18bn of orders for a dual tranche trade.
  • Malaysian oil and gas company Petroliam Nasional (Petronas) made its mark on the dollar bond market on Tuesday, raising $6bn from a deal that received orders of $37bn at its peak. This was despite a ratings outlook change to negative this week and headwinds from the Covid-19 pandemic and volatile oil prices.
  • HSBC has overhauled the structure of its global banking business for the second time in as many years in a push to cut costs and bring its commercial and investment banking divisions closer together.
  • France’s La Poste saw almost €14bn of demand for its dual tranche trade on Tuesday, with the state-owned postal service kick-starting the shortened week in style with borrowers expected to start exploring issuance down their capital structures.