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High grade and crossover bonds

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◆ Fourth largest deal from any corporate in euros ◆ Concession needed to lock in size ◆ Marketed alongside debut Canadian dollar trade
Volumes and concessions are set to skip higher, hand in hand
◆ Safer credits prove popular in uncertain market ◆ Alliander sheds orders as it punches through fair value ◆ Argan ends near five year euro absence
Lull in dollar corporate supply supports spread levels
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  • Raiffeisen Bank International has launched a digital platform for Schuldschein and loan transactions, called Yellowe.
  • Mersen, a French technology manufacturer, will not accept bids from UK-based lenders for its new Schuldschein “in anticipation of a potential Brexit”. Three bankers away from the transaction said they have also discussed excluding UK lenders with other borrowers.
  • Indian Railway Finance Corp (IRFC) pushed into the dollar market on Monday to close a bond trade ahead of the end of the financial year. The issuer managed to grab $500m from the five year sale, despite a weaker market.
  • VC Trade, the leading digital challenger in the Schuldschein market, has begun cooperating with Scope Ratings, which will now offer optional credit opinions for any borrower using the platform. This will add efficiency and transparency to the market, proponents claim.
  • Barclays and Natwest Markets have come first and second in league tables for cross-border activity in the US private placement market. As US private placements become more popular in the UK, British banks have strengthened their status in the market.
  • Dollar bonds in Asia followed the US markets’ end to last week by trading lower. Nonetheless, the continent’s investment grade issuers are looking to print with many high yield issuers still emerging from earnings blackouts.