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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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Beijing Capital Juda last week priced its first bond, raising Rmb1.3bn ($209m) from an oversubscribed three year deal that saw investors eager to gobble up a dim sum trade.
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China Merchants Holdings (International) became the third Chinese issuer in less than a week to access the international bond market with a dual-tranche offering split between five and 10 year bonds on July 27. The identical structures and close proximity of the deals meant it was more or less the same result for the Chinese conglomerate.
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Tingyi (Cayman Island) Holding Corp is making its inaugural appearance in the offshore renminbi (CNH) bond market on July 30, taking bids for a three year Reg S trade.
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IBM dipped into the sterling market on Wednesday for a small but sharply priced seven year print. While some expected a larger deal size than £300m, they agreed that the deal was a positive sign for a market that has seen declining supply in 2015.
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China concerns have failed to dissuade European corporate borrowers from going about their capital markets business this week, with a number of bonds in the works and acquisition loans progressing.
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The corporate bond market is open for further issuance this summer, according to syndicate bankers, but the battle is likely to be in finding issuers who are willing to tap the market.