JP Morgan
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World Bank cemented its status as one of the leading sterling issuers in the public sector bond market with a record-breaking 10 year deal on Thursday.
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South African gold mining company Gold Fields Ltd has raised R3.7bn ($252m) of fresh capital to fund the construction of a new mine in Chile.
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JP Morgan has appointed two new co-heads of investment banking coverage for Australia and New Zealand, according to an internal memo seen by GlobalCapital Asia.
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Italian banks have been piling into the primary bond market in the first quarter, capitalising on an incredible rally in the sector as investors look for new sources of value.
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World Bank mandated banks for a 10 year sterling deal on Wednesday — an extremely rare trade from a non-UK public sector borrower, but in line with the trend of issuers going out longer in the sterling curve.
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Siemens, the German machinery group, paid an average yield of 0.12% for €4bn of debt spread over three to 12 year maturities this week, as investors leaped at the chance to snap up highly rated corporate debt.
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Nordic banks Länsförsäkringar Bank (LF Bank) and Landsbankinn were able to offer “attractive value” in the preferred senior market this week, amid a general hunt for yield among credit investors.
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The European Investment Bank raised €3bn on Tuesday with a five year deal, receiving €14bn of orders for a deal capped at €3bn.
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Two sterling public sector bond issues were announced on Tuesday, but aside from timing, the trades had little in common. The UK Debt Management Office printed £2.5bn at 50 years, while the International Finance Corp raised £350m with a seven year.
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Société du Grand Paris impressed the SSA market on Tuesday with a series of superlatives. It sold its biggest ever bond with the longest ever maturity for a syndicated green bond in any asset class. The City of Munich hit another landmark with the first social bond from a European city.
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Banco BPM tightened pricing by nearly 30bp for its debut non-preferred senior bond on Tuesday, with investors backing Italian credits as a source of value compared with other assets in the euro area.
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Siemens, the German machinery group, launched a €4bn and £850m multi-tranche jumbo bond issue on Tuesday, blowing away worries that similar deals from last week had started to saturate the market.