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High grade and crossover bonds

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CEE
Estonian sovereign outing its first under local law
◆ 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
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  • China Vanke Co bagged $600m on Thursday from its first international bond in more than three years, sneaking into the market the day after the Federal Reserve announced a rate hike.
  • After a fall in 2016 supply, the allure of euro bonds for US issuers looks to be set on a path of relative decline, as the market loses its technical shine and faces the prospect of cash repatriation for corporate America.
  • United Healthcare Group became the first dollar issuer to jump into the market after the US Federal Reserve’s hawkish hike led to a sell-off in Treasuries amid predictions that 2017 could prove to be a more subdued year for high grade supply.
  • Corporate credit withstood the jitters in government bond markets that followed the US Federal Reserve’s decision to hike interest rates on Wednesday, passing the test on its last risk event of the year.
  • Innogy, the renewables, retail and grids subsidiary of RWE, is on course to be made liable for €10.1bn of bonds issued by its parent, after gaining approval from a majority of bondholders for a consent solicitation this week.
  • The many Chinese issuers seeking offshore funding will need to negotiate a delicate dance in the new year. Volatility has rocked markets in the last 12 months, meaning issuers will have to stay nimble if they want to garner investor attention. Morgan Davis and Addison Gong report.