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◆ Italian issuer pairs two sustainable formats ◆ Trade hits size targets ◆ Tight price tests investors' limits
◆ US drugs firm pays single digit NIP ◆ Friday deals growing more common ◆ Issuer moves ahead of anticipated quiet week
French company diversifies funding after inaugural dollar deal last year
Issuers rewarded with tight pricing
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The high grade corporate market in the US roared back to life this week following the Labor Day holiday as borrowers rushed to exploit pent-up demand ahead of next week’s US Federal Reserve meeting.
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BMW, FCE Bank and Daimler added to the recent surge of activity from autos this week, with all three taking to the euro market to sell floating rate paper.
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Two Spanish issuers made up the sole corporate supply on Monday, with Iberdrola and Telefónica both tapping the market. Both companies received a warm welcome from investors, who are seemingly unperturbed by upcoming elections in the country writes Nathan Collins.
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Swisscom had the benchmark market to itself for a 10 year print on Tuesday, drawing a hefty order book for a small deal and managing to steal a march on the swathe of issuers that sold benchmarks later in the week.
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FCE Bank became the third auto issuer to tap the euro market for floating rate paper this week, selling a four year note. While the issuer gathered an oversubscribed order book, a longer maturity and weaker ratings compared to peers demanded a larger new issue premium for the print.
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Shell sold the largest euro deal from a corporate issuer in seven months on Thursday, shrugging off any concerns on the oil sector to sell €3.45bn of bonds across three tranches.