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Nordics

  • Sparebank 1 Boligkreditt sold its third covered bond benchmark of the year this week. It has launched trades in euros, dollars, Norwegian kroner, and is monitoring the growing sterling and Australian dollar markets, chief executive Arve Austestad told The Cover.
  • Covered bond issuers proved reluctant to follow ING’s lead and launch trades on Tuesday, as activity shifted to the senior market. But given the strong reception for secured issuance syndicate bankers remain confident of supply later in the week.
  • Sparebank 1 Boligkreditt on Monday returned to the euro market for the first time since January. The rare borrower priced a five 1/2 year benchmark many times cheaper than where it sold a longer trade at the start of the year, exemplifying the sustained tightening in core covered spreads.
  • The covered bond market is gearing up to restart next week, said syndicate bankers, who expect at least two benchmark trades to hit the screens. German and Scandinavian borrowers are tipped as the most likely candidates to take advantage of squeezed secondary levels. But with no end to spread contraction in sight, the urge to wait and watch levels grind tighter could cause some borrowers to hold off.
  • The stressed cover pool losses of Australia’s covered bonds are worse than those in core Europe, Moody’s first performance overview of the jurisdiction revealed on Tuesday. However, Australia still boasts highly rated issuers and impressive collateral scores.
  • European covered bond issuers, along with senior unsecured financials and investment grade corporates, were this week presented with excellent funding conditions, despite a ratcheting-up of pressure on Spain and Italy in the early part of the week.
  • Secondary covered bonds spreads are grinding tighter as buyers faced with negative yields in the sovereign market drive short dated covered yields towards zero. While core jurisdictions wallow in a sea of demand, investors are still averse to peripheral paper, but the wide spread gap could cause Spanish and Italian spreads to bounce back, said bankers.
  • Sweden’s regulator wants to alter how issuers value cover pool assets and introduce regular collateral stress tests.
  • Bayerische Landesbank (Bayern LB) launched its first euro benchmark covered bond in over a year on Wednesday, bringing a 10 year public sector backed Pfandbrief originally mandated in July 2011. The trade prioritised pricing over size and received less interest than recent German deals. At the less traditional end of the covered spectrum, Nykredit Realkredit opened books on a tap of a recently issued junior covered bond.
  • The senior market took centre stage again on Tuesday, dissuading covered issuers from competing with another trio of unsecured trades after Westpac’s slow bookbuild on Monday. The Australian issuer closed the spread gap with its Nordic peers, but found demand lacklustre compared with earlier Australian benchmarks.
  • Swedish banks head a group of possible covered bond issuers, despite resurgent volatility. The Swedes have largely stayed away from the euro market so far this year, opting instead to rely on domestic demand. But analysts still expect the need for diversification and name recognition among Swedish banks to yield euro benchmarks.
  • Terra Boligkreditt launched its largest ever covered bond this week and, with increasing redemptions and a growing mortgage book it could soon become an issuer of jumbo deals, its chief executive told The Cover. In addition, a new ownership structure will provide liquidity and capital support, and is expected to lead to rating uplift.