Most recent/Bond comments/Ad
Most recent/Bond comments/Ad
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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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Financial institutions have taken an early plunge into additional tier one bonds this week, as European and US investors show willing to take on risk and put cash to work.
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The drawing power of one of Asia’s top credits was on show this week with Ping An Life Insurance Co of China debuting in the dollar bond market with a $1.2bn deal that was multiple times covered across two tranches.
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South Korea’s Woori Bank sealed a 144A return to the international bond market on January 12. The issuer’s aggressive pricing strategy kept US investors at bay, but it was unavoidable as the borrower wanted cheap funding, said bankers on the deal.
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Investors barely charged Mediobanca and Royal Bank of Canada on Tuesday for printing new five year senior bonds.
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Australian lender, Macquarie Bank printed an eight year Swiss franc bond on Monday, mimicking its compatriot National Australia Bank's effort a weak earlier.
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Ping An Life Insurance Company of China started building books for its inaugural dollar bond on Tuesday, while South Korea’s Woori Bank and China Energy Reserve and Chemicals Group are also wooing investors for their respective dollar deals.