NatWest Markets
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The Inter-American Development Bank and the State of North Rhine-Westphalia only managed to raise small sizes in the sterling market on Tuesday, with the leads on the latter declining to comment on whether the deal was fully subscribed.
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Paddy Power’s prospective US private placement debut has been kicked into the long grass, according to sources familiar with the situation, as the Irish gambling company instead focuses on a merger with Canada’s PokerStars.
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Europe's high grade corporate bond new issue market has opened the week smartly, with almost €2bn of debt raised, as borrowers nip into the market before earnings blackouts interrupt new issuance.
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The torrent of ESG supply shows no sign of slowing. Inter-American Development Bank’s debut sustainable development bond is set to come to market on Tuesday in sterling, alongside a sustainability bond from Bank Nederlandse Gemeenten.
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The loan market has finally amended an existing facility to reference Sonia as its pricing benchmark, though the Bank of England has warned that the loan market still needs to do “much more work” to move away from Libor.
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Italy’s first inflation-linked syndication in more than two years hit the market on Wednesday and raised €4bn from a book of €22bn, far outstripping the €6.4bn book for its previous linker sale.
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Northern Powergrid, a rare issuer in the UK market, issued a 40 year sterling bond on Wednesday that found a strong reception, in a week that has proved patchy for issuers in the currency.
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The UK’s South West Water has amended the margin on a loan to be priced as a spread against Sonia just days after the Bank of England said the loan market needs to do more to prepare for the cessation of Libor.
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Metro Bank came back to the sterling market on Wednesday to make a second effort at selling non-preferred senior debt, raising the pricing on its offer by 200bp to 9.5%. Market participants suggested the transaction was already a ‘done deal’, but warned that the interest costs would weigh very heavily on the bank’s profit and loss statement.
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The UK’s Royal Mail obtained chunky orders for a seven year euro bond issue on Tuesday, bringing home to bankers how much money is still in the system, despite the heavy issuance of corporate debt in the past month.
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