Most recent/Bond comments/Ad
Most recent/Bond comments/Ad
Most recent
Deals price tightly to Western European peers, with high-spread Icelandic banks performing the most
Funding across all parts of the capital structure is available with issuers likely to prioritise unsecured borrowing
FIG borrowers flood dollar markets as Westpac's SEC exit strategy pays off
◆ HSBC brings €3.25bn of funding across three tranches ◆ Lloyds opts for €750m single tranche before UK local elections ◆ Heavy euro FIG issuance as possible Iran deal announced
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The Bank of Portugal could compensate Novo Banco bondholders who were written down at the end of last year, as the controversial bail-in comes under further scrutiny.
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KEB Hana Bank battled choppy markets with its first international outing after its merger. As volatility heightened during bookbuilding, the lender opted to scale back the size of the deal in exchange for tighter pricing.
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Lloyds, Dexia Crédit Local and Wells Fargo have all sought dollar funding this week, turning away from a bare European market to take advantage of a brighter tone in the US after bank results.
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The dollar has been left as the only accessible currency for European banks looking to print benchmark debt so far this week, as even covered bonds succumb to a global market rout.
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Bank of Communications Hong Kong showed that the year's volatile start is no problem for some issuers, bringing a $500m bond this week, which was driven by Chinese bank money. Bankers lauded the trade as BoCom pulled in a six times covered book without having to pay up.
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South Korea’s KEB Hana Bank has gone live with the first international bond since its merger, launching a dollar deal on Wednesday morning.