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France’s Bastille Day and US inflation data expected to subdue supply early in the week
Foreign issuers tap market for price and diversification
Hyperscaler funding needs could drive the next wave of US supply in euros
Cooler reception suggest AI capex hype is shrinking
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The Schuldschein market’s official lines of bookbuilding have been all but shut during the Covid-19 crisis, but sources have told GlobalCapital that several companies have discreetly approached larger lenders for club or bilateral deals.
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New issue concessions have tumbled in the high grade corporate bond market today. French industrial gases company Air Liquide has rewritten this week's rules by pricing a bond through its own curve on Thursday.
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The 2008 financial crisis forged a generation of investment bankers well versed in advising governments — and with many having returned to banking, they are likely to be in demand again. But history suggests banks will not be earning lucrative fees, writes David Rothnie.
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Corporate borrowers are pumping out new bonds this week and on Thursday it was the turn of some of those worst hit by the Covid-19 pandemic, as investors have felt emboldened enough to look further down the credit curve each day this week. Aeroports de Paris is on screens, as investors credited central bank intervention with bolstering the market.
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A €5.9bn day in the corporate bond primary market and benign conditions elsewhere has led some syndicate bankers to dream of seeing something they haven't for more than a fortnight — a third consecutive day of bond issuance.
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UK chemicals firm Johnson Matthey is looking for a target of $300m US private placement funding, with arrangers more confident of selling dollar debt than euro or sterling flavours.