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◆Highest rated FIG bail-in paper in euros ◆ Prices level with Nordic peer ◆ Premium paid
Currency's higher yielding appeal has lured investors across the capital stack
More US banks have used callable format for opco dollar issuance this year
◆ US company aims to issue more frequently in euros ◆ Final book heard at €1.75bn ◆ Favourable relative pricing at seven years
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The CNH market got a welcome dash of diversification on November 13 with India’s ICICI Bank making a rare appearance in that currency via a three year bond. The variety that ICICI brought to the market, coupled with an abundance in liquidity, meant the issuer was able to raise capital at a favourable funding level.
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Lloyds took centre stage in the senior unsecured FIG market this week, drawing an order book of around €7bn for a seven year bond, as it made the most of the noise surrounding regulators' plans to implement a total loss absorbing capital (TLAC) measure.
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Lloyds Bank returned to the Samurai market for the first time in more than three years on Thursday with a ¥48bn ($415m) five year deal.
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Swiss franc investors took advantage of a rare opportunity to buy Norwegian senior unsecured financial paper this week when Sparebanken Nord-Norge made its debut in the currency.
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The Financial Stability Board has published its hotly anticipated paper on the final round of new bank capital requirements — Total Loss Absorbing Capacity, or TLAC. But the consultation paper, rushed out ahead of the G20 meetings in Brisbane this weekend, leaves the most important questions unanswered.
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FIG supply continued apace on Thursday, with Credit Suisse and JP Morgan hitting screens with self-led euro prints, while France’s Caisse Centrale du Credit Immobilier de France (3CIF) sold its third government guaranteed print of the year.