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Deal reviews
◆ Issuer lands in 'the place to be' amid strong demand for covereds ◆ Achieves its largest covered book since at least 2023 ◆ After 7bp tightening the bond was spotted another 2bp tighter to erase new issue concession
◆ Several market currents support new long five years ◆ UniCredit GmbH achieves larger size close to fair value ◆ CRH pushes annual covered funding to €3.15bn
◆ Deal lands flat to recent UK and Canadian trades ◆ Dollar prices find stable footing for issuers and investors ◆ Pricing in line with other currencies
◆ Largest coverage ratio for almost three months ◆ Priced flat to fair value ◆ Slow pipeline predicted for rest of week
Opinion
Easily dismissed as "fast money" with all the negative implications that can bring in the primary bond market, hedge funds are becoming increasingly important to covered bond issuers
The fears of the covered bond market reflect a lack of conviction in the superiority of the product
The preference for a diverse group of lead managers and the convention of reciprocity keep covered bond bookrunning competitive despite concentration so far this year
Rate increases could be closer than you think
Analysis
Central and Eastern Europe earmarked as an area of growth by market participants
FIG
With masses to fund and spreads super-tight, banks will race to market, but central banks are expected to tighten
FIG
Banks could rush to issue as fast as possible, taking advantage of remarkably tight spreads
European and other regulators are working on reforms to make covered bond funding more efficient
More articles

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More from covered bonds

  • The covered bond market has had a good run so far this year, particularly at the long end of the curve. But with a number of potentially negative events on the horizon, risk adjusted returns may become more attractive at the short end, said analysts at DZ Bank.
  • LBBW, OP Mortgage Bank and The Mortgage Bank of Finland took little time to sell their benchmark euro deals as, despite the relatively meagre yields on offer, the bonds offered a substantial spreads compared to negative yielding German government bonds.
  • Portuguese covered bonds were steady on Friday following news that a Portuguese court had granted a provisional injunction against Bank of Portugal (BdP), and following a concern raised on Monday by Moody’s that Portuguese covered bond holders could lose their priority claim. The news emerges as DBRS decides on Friday whether to maintain its investment grade rating on Portugal, without which government bonds would not qualify for the ECB’s purchase programme.