Goldman Sachs
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The Republic of Korea became the first Asian sovereign out of the gate in 2017, sealing a $1bn 10 year bond on Thursday against a backdrop of political turmoil in the country.
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SEA Holdings, Guangzhou R&F Properties and a Changchun local government financing vehicle took advantage of the abundant liquidity in the bond market by locking in funds on Thursday.
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Ten year Pfandbrief €500m deals issued this week by NordLB and Bawag were narrowly oversubscribed even with the support of the Eurosystem.
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Auckland Council on Thursday pulled off a 7bp tightening for its first ever public deal in euros. The trade was joined in the market by paper from the City of Hamburg and Bpifrance Financement.
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As many as eight covered bonds were launched across three currencies this week, the vaguely discernible pattern suggesting better interest for the larger deals with intermediate maturities and particularly those from non-eurozone issuers where liquidity is most likely to be better.
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UK premium car maker Jaguar Land Rover on Thursday sold its first euro bond at one of the lowest coupons seen in the high yield market in the last two years.
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The week's heavy pace of investment grade corporate bond supply extended into Thursday, as lower rated issuers dominated deal flow and crossover names thrived.
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Two KKR backed firms have brought the first European leveraged loan market repricings of the year, picking up on a trend that is already in full swing in the US this year.
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Corporates from Hong Kong, China and Singapore were clamouring for investors’ attention on Thursday for their respective offerings.
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The Republic of Korea is set to be the first Asian sovereign to sell bonds in the New Year, marketing a dollar-denominated 10 year on Thursday morning.