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◆ Aerospace firm ends near six year euro market absence ◆ Books soar for seven year deal ◆ Trade lands close to fair value
◆ Schaeffler attracts €5.8bn peak book… ◆ …while SPIE finds €2.8bn of orders ◆ Strong demand allows for strong price moves
◆ Issuer punches through 200bp ◆ Some concession still needed ◆ First domestic sterling deal in almost two weeks
◆ Fourth largest deal from any corporate in euros ◆ Concession needed to lock in size ◆ Marketed alongside debut Canadian dollar trade
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SEA Holdings, Guangzhou R&F Properties and a Changchun local government financing vehicle took advantage of the abundant liquidity in the bond market by locking in funds on Thursday.
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Broadcom printed the biggest corporate trade of the year so far as yield hungry investors snapped up triple-B rated names ahead of US president-elect Donald Trump’s inauguration next week.
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The week's heavy pace of investment grade corporate bond supply extended into Thursday, as lower rated issuers dominated deal flow and crossover names thrived.
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The first two weeks of January have not brought the surge of new issuance that many expected, but the response to bonds so far shows that investors have grown surer of themselves compared to the end of 2016. Market watchers are now hopeful that Chinese New Year will mark the real start for deals, with February expected to bring roaring trade. Morgan Davis and Addison Gong report.
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Adani Ports and Special Economic Zone continued the Indian issuer trend this week, grabbing $500m from international investors as Chinese borrowers wait until after the New Year holiday to hit the market.
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Corporates from Hong Kong, China and Singapore were clamouring for investors’ attention on Thursday for their respective offerings.