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Euro

  • BNP Paribas became the first issuer to print a French sub-Euribor ten year on Tuesday, hot on the heels of Monday’s sub-Euribor seven year from CFF. Europe’s second largest bank skipped initial price thoughts on the triple-A deal and had the syndication wrapped up by 10:30 CET.
  • On Tuesday Unione di Banche Italiane (UBI Banca) priced a €1bn ten year deal a full 10bp through where its outstanding ten year print from January was trading the previous day. The spread came sharply tighter through the execution process, helped by an early order from the ECB.
  • Compagnie de Financement Fonciere (CFF) priced this year’s first sub-Euribor seven year euro deal on Monday. At 5bp through mid-swaps, the issuer matched the price it obtained for its smaller, but extremely well received, five year print in September. Given the issuer has already completed its funding for 2014, Monday’s €1.5bn trade represents a significant contribution to the French issuer’s 2015 funding requirement.
  • For the first time the European Central Bank waded into the primary market to buy covered bonds for its third purchase programme (CBPP3) this week, as eurozone issuers from the currency bloc’s core and periphery returned after a long hiatus. The central bank’s buying may not be so good for core issuers but the evidence so far suggests peripheral names who have been locked out are about to bask in its largesse.
  • The European Central Bank’s covered bond purchase programme entered a new phase this week as eurozone issuance enabled it to buy the primary market, rather than relying on secondary where supply is drying up. Its buying is good news for peripheral banks but may cause investors to desert the core.
  • Banco Sabadell returned to the covered bond market for the first time since January 2013 to launch a seven year Cedulas Hipotecarias which priced in line with Credito Emiliano's earlier deal of the same tenor. The deal was less reliant on demand from official institutions than Emiliano and will send a strong message to other peripheral issuers that may be looking to refinance liquidity borrowed under the long term refinancing operation.
  • Credito Emiliano became the second issuer to take advantage of the European Central Bank’s (ECB) buying programme, launching a covered bond on Thursday. The deal led to a repricing of the issuer's curve in a move that could spur other peripheral names to return to the market.
  • Nordea Finland has issued the first deal from a eurozone bank that is eligible for the European Central Bank’s covered bond purchase programme. Though it was priced at the tightest ever spread for a 10 year deal for a non-German issuer, investors said it offered good relative value.
  • Czech Raiffeisenbank opened books for the first publicly syndicated euro benchmark from the country on Wednesday and had attracted sufficient order interest at the guidance level to make a deal viable. At the same time, Toronto Dominion Bank mandated leads for its first Australian dollar benchmark.
  • Bank of Nova Scotia (BNS) was set to price its third euro benchmark of the year, and its fourth covered bond benchmark across all currencies, on Tuesday. The €1.25bn tranche took advantage of space created by robust Eurosystem central bank demand at the short end. Responding to reverse enquiry, the issuer also priced a £250m three year floater on a book that was twice subscribed.
  • Covered bonds have taken results of the European Banking Authority’s (EBA) stress tests in their stride with the most vulnerable deal of all widening just three basis points on Monday. Borrowers are expected to return to the primary market this week or early next, ahead of the European Central Bank’s November meeting and US Non-Farm Payrolls. In the meantime, the ECB announced it had bought €1.7bn of covered bonds from Monday to Wednesday last week.
  • The Spanish covered bond law could be set for profound change that will bring it into line with the best in show schemes. Proposals set out on Wednesday by the Spanish treasury tie into capital requirement regulations and will become unstoppable under their own momentum. The major challenge is not that investors will have less collateral protection but rather the transition process itself. Grandfathering existing deals isn’t a viable option, there would need to be a huge debt exchange of all existing bonds for new ones or a fundamental change in terms and conditions.