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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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South Korean bond issuers have defied a volatile market over the past week or so, selling $2.5bn of offshore bonds and giving a rare bit of good news for debt bankers — who admit they are nervous about the future. Addison Gong reports.
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Two Chinese state-owned enterprises (SOEs), China Petrochemical Corp (Sinopec) and State Power Investment Corp (SPIC), picked a short-lived issuance window to raise a combined $1.07bn on Wednesday.
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China Gas Holdings doubled the size of its Panda bond to Rmb2bn ($288m) on Wednesday, thanks to strong demand from investors, according to bankers.
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Malaysia’s Tenaga Nasional Berhad (TNB) raised $750m from a Wakala sukuk sale on Tuesday, navigating market worries by using a targeted approach for its deal.
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Erste Group has arranged a Schuldschein via blockchain, through a platform it helped construct alongside Linux Foundation’s Hyperledger Fabric.
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Indonesia state-owned electricity company Perusahaan Listrik Negara (PLN) priced its first deal as a fully investment grade rated issuer on Thursday, tapping not only the dollar market but also euros for the first time.