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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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Akelius Residential Property, the Swedish property company, ratcheted in the yield on its hybrid capital issue by 50bp on Monday, setting the stage for a romping week of similar issuance as further names line up deals.
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Natixis, one of the investment banks that has gone furthest to prioritise greener financing, had to ramp up its provisions for credit loss from US natural gas producers in the fourth quarter, pointing to “structural transformation” in the sector. But it told GlobalCapital that it still saw opportunity in the industry.
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Indian Railway Finance Corp courted investors for a 10 year bond on Thursday, only to add a 30 year tranche to the transaction later in the day following reverse enquiry.
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Chinese ship financing company CSSC (Hong Kong) Shipping Co took advantage of the risk-on sentiment in the market on Thursday to take home an $800m dual-tranche bond.
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The Schuldschein market is having a quiet, Germany-focused start to the year. But Schuldschein agents are confident investor demand remains as strong as ever.
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LVMH Moët Hennessy – Louis Vuitton SE, the French luxury goods group, and Comcast, the US telecoms company, brought the European corporate bond market’s two biggest multi-tranche issues of the year on Wednesday, each hitting sterling and euros and blasting aside fears around coronavirus epidemic’s economic impact. LVMH raised €9.33bn, and Comcast €4.6bn.