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The bank's regular appearances in primary markets stopped after Russia invaded Ukraine
Japanese government bond yields have risen during the last few months
BSTDB has had a tricky time since Russia attacked Ukraine, both of which are shareholders
Demand peaked at six times the deal size, but many orders dropped out
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This Thursday was Fat Thursday, a Polish equivalent of Pancake Day, celebrated by the consumption of doughnuts. But Poland’s Ministry of Finance fed socially responsible investors a different treat this year: €2bn of green bonds.
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Two Turkish issuers were back on screens this week as the country continues its rehabilitation in the capital markets. QNB Finansbank printed with a 10bp new issue premium, according to one lead manager, a level which he said shows how far Turkey has come since the sovereign paid up 50bp for its post-volatility return to market trade in October.
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Koç Holding, Turkey's largest holding company, has mandated three banks for a five or seven year dollar RegS/144A benchmark. An investor has said that given recent Turkey volatility, he would want to see a much larger premium over the Turkey curve for the longer of those two options.
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QNB Finansbank has revised initial price thoughts for its benchmark dollar 5.5 year bond, with books for the deal over $1.4bn. Both an investor and a syndicate official had said earlier in the day they expected tighter pricing.
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Poland is in the market for its most ambitious green bonds yet. It has opened books for two tranches of euro debt, hitting the 10 and 30 year maturity buckets.
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The Russian sovereign is expected to come to market for a Eurobond, perhaps as early as March, but some investors are concerned that the strained diplomatic relations between Russia and the West make its paper too dangerous to invest in.