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◆ Telecoms firm takes €1bn across two legs ◆ No to negative premiums offered ◆ Real money sticks as fast money falls out
◆ Real estate firm takes £400m on second outing ◆ Single digit concession needed ◆ Elevated sterling yields putting off potential issuers
◆ Food group issues euros to finance dollar tender ◆ Low single digit concession offered ◆ Dairy firm Arla preps euro debut
Estonian sovereign outing its first under local law
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Chinese technology group Huawei Investment & Holding left nothing to chance with its $2bn bond return. It paid up to compensate for the size of the deal and to soothe investor concerns over the poor secondary performances of other recent deals.
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State Grid Corp of China is set to go on the road next week to gauge interest for a dual-currency bond, as it seeks to raise funds in dollars and euros.
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The sterling bond market gave a defiant reminder of its capacity for corporate paper this week, blowing away the memories of a so far underwhelming year that has been dominated by Brexit fears and undersupply. Ross Lancaster reports.
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Kering, the French luxury goods company, issued a €500m no-grow transaction on Thursday that saw some orders drop out but still came with a negative new issue premium.
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JD.com’s inaugural outing in the international bond market could not have veered any further from expectations when the notes tanked in the secondary market. An overzealous pricing strategy was the main culprit for the poor performance, but divisive credit ratings for the Chinese company did not help either. Rev Hui reports.
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China Petroleum & Chemical Corp (Sinopec) made a comeback to the bond market this week with a $3bn four-tranche deal. But in a step away from its previous outings, the oil and gas giant opted for price over size.