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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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  • Korea Southern Power Co (Kospo) has priced the first public dollar bond from South Korea amid a US government shutdown. But the 144A deal saw little fallout from that. Easing tensions on the Korean peninsula, the quality of its credit and demand for short-dated paper ensured investor interest.
  • Korea Southern Power Co (Kospo) is returning to the offshore dollar bond market after almost five years, becoming the first issuer from the country to tap international investors in 2018.
  • Geely Automobile Holdings opted for price over size with its new bond, landing aggressively at the middle of the final guidance range. The tactic meant the private company funded at or even inside the levels of some similarly or higher rated state-owned enterprises (SOE).
  • Chinese issuers Jinjiang International Holding, China South City Holding, Guangxi Communications Investment Group Corp and Tianjin Real Estate Group Co tapped the market for euro and dollar bonds on a busy Thursday.
  • Aircraft leasing company AerCap was the only benchmark-sized corporate issuer in the dollar market as earnings blackouts enveloped the investment grade market in the US.
  • The Schuldschein and US PP markets pride themselves on rigorous credit analysis, but both were caught flat-footed when UK outsourcing firm Carillion fell into liquidation this week. The likelihood of private debt investors getting their money back is slim, and the knock-on effects on both markets are being disputed, write Nell Mackenzie and Silas Brown.