Most recent/Bond comments/Ad
Most recent/Bond comments/Ad
Most recent
◆ Issuer finds window between political volatility and supply onslaught ◆ Deal sets record low spread for callable sterling senior bail-in debt ◆ Investors remain on board despite tight price
◆ Deal unaffected by Japanese macro volatility, lead said ◆ Aggressive pricing led to heavy long-end attrition ◆ Continuing trend of heavy supply for dual tranche holdco senior trades
◆ UK lender raises $4.5bn-equivalent in five senior holding company tranches this week ◆ Both deals target long dated funding ◆ Despite secondary widening, euro offering lands with hardly any premium
◆ Insurance companies anchor long dated green tranche with near-4% yield ◆ Curve extension debated ◆ Deal comes amid widening secondary spreads but lands with negligible premium
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◆ RBC leads European banks to funding in the US ◆ Once JP Morgan starts the third quarter bank earnings season local FIG bond wave could materialise ◆ This could keep market busy until US election
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Issuer-friendly mismatch in supply and demand masks the difficulty of timing the market
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◆ Pricing over size prioritised... ◆ ... but likely not at the initial stage ◆ Elevated concession, albeit not the main measure of FRNs' attractiveness, suggests limits to investor demand
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◆ Dutch bank pushes sterling funding through its euro secondary curve ◆ Max size achieved ◆ Investors remain glued to the deal as they foresee performance amid supply scarcity
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◆ New Zealand bank prints for first time in more than a year ◆ Deal execution is one of the best from the issuer for senior funding in euros in recent years ◆ Pricing comes close to FV
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◆ Commerzbank opts to raise long end senior funding for 2025 a week after dollar AT1 ◆ BFCM goes longer compared to recent multi-tranche Samurai ◆ Commerz pays no premium, BFCM offers slight concession