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Euro

  • Fitch has upgraded the rating of Turkiye Garanti Bankasi (Garanti) after BBVA took a controlling stake in the bank. The rating action is likely to bode well from a credit perspective for the issuer’s forthcoming covered bond.
  • The Austrian restructuring law that wiped out subordinated debt guaranteed by the state of Carinthia was overturned this week by the Austrian constitutional court (VfGH). However, it is not expected to change the positions of subordinated and senior creditors much. Covered bonds should remain secure, said research analysts at LBBW and Erste Bank.
  • New issue premiums have fallen slightly and with many transactions going on to perform well in the secondary market, bankers conclude that primary conditions are receptive. However, with August approaching, investors are more likely to be away from their desks and activity is bound to slow.
  • Muenchener Hypothekenbank (MuHyp) has priced one of the tightest covered bonds of the year.
  • Covered bond new issue premiums fell on Tuesday as four borrowers launched deals worth over €2.5bn in total, on collective demand of about €5bn. LBBW’s second deal of the month was priced 1bp tighter than its last bond, even though it was two years longer. Bankia was set to issue at less than half the concession paid by peripheral borrowers last week, while Bank of Montreal and Bank of Nova Scotia were set to price in line with recent Canadian predecessors.
  • The secondary market is no longer a relevant tool for price discovery. Spreads now only reflect the level at which the eurosystem would buy. The primary market is the more relevant price marker, but with concessions rising to as much as 24bp in some deals this week, investors are being alienated and traders are struggling to do their job, said analysts at Barclays.
  • Nationwide stood out on another busy day in the covered bond market, shaking off three euro-market rivals to print a €1bn mortgage backed bond on Thursday in line with Lloyds and BNS.
  • Little more than a week after its successful initial public offering, the reprivatized Deutsche Pfandbriefbank issued a €500m five year Pfandbrief that was priced closer than ever to its highly regarded peers, LBBW and Helaba. At the same time, WL Bank issued one of the tightest and most oversubscribed Pfandbriefe of the year.
  • Bankinter has priced the fourth peripheral covered bond of the week, the longest from a peripheral issuer since mid-April, and the most oversubscribed in the seven year tenor since early March. The evident success removes any lingering doubt over peripheral banks’ access to capital markets following the re-emergence of the Greek debt crisis.
  • Landesbank Hessen-Thüringen issued a four year mortgage backed Pfandbrief on Wednesday, meeting its targets for size and spread. Bankers were hopeful that more covered bonds would emerge on Thursday, as conditions were good for both core and peripheral names.
  • Credit Foncier de France is out with its second RMBS of the year. CFHL-2 2015 may not come with the special regulatory treatment of the issuer’s covered bonds, but the deal offers a spread that looks particularly alluring for the risk. A major investor of covered bonds and securitizations said RMBS offer far better risk return than covered bonds, and chastised fellow investors for their lazy approach to assessing credit risk.
  • Following successful deals from Berlin Hyp on Tuesday and Helaba on Wednesday, two more German issuers have mandated leads. WL Bank and Deutsche Pfandbriefbank (Pbb) are expected to open books on Thursday, respectively for five and seven year benchmarks.