Finland
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Finland launched its first ever dual tranche deal on Wednesday, scoring €3bn with a five year leg and €1.5bn at 30 years. The issue comes on the heels of an immensely popular Belgian barbell printed on Tuesday.
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Political volatility in France has buffeted the euro market this week, leaving some public sector issuers floundering as government yield curves spiked. Other issuers have had no such troubles though, thriving amid the turmoil.
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Belgium defied turmoil afflicting European government bond spreads this week, pulling in big books for a dual tranche euro benchmark. The sovereign's success may have emboldened Finland to follow suit with its own barbell transaction.
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The UK Debt Management Office has opted to reopen an index linked Gilt maturing in 2065 for its sixth and final syndication of the 2016/17 financial year. Meanwhile, Municipality Finance opened sterling issuance for the week with a December 2020 issue.
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A euro deal is imminent for India’s Motherson Sumi Systems (MSSL) as it completes its acquisition of Finland’s PKC Group.
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SpareBank1 Boligkreditt, Aareal Bank and Nordea took advantage of strong demand for five year paper to issue oversubscribed deals this week, paying virtually no new issue concession.
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Nordea Mortgage Bank (NMB) was set to issue its largest covered bond in three years with a well subscribed order book and a modest concession. At the same time, La Banque Postale returned with its now regular annual covered bond funding.
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Municipality Finance raised €1bn on Thursday with a short 10 year bond that was, according to head of funding Joakim Holmström, the agency's top priority for the quarter.
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In a volatile year for European equity capital markets, with issuance down sharply, the Nordic region has been a bright spot, enjoying its second biggest ever year for issuance. Bankers believe that momentum will carry into 2017.
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DNA, one of Finland’s largest telecommunications companies, closed at €10.10 on its stock exchange debut on Thursday, after pricing its €413m IPO in the lower middle of its range.