Oceania
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ING has appointed Uday Sareen as head of wholesale banking for Europe, the Middle East and Africa.
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United Overseas Bank achieved the tightest spread for a five year floating rate bank issue in Australian dollars in over 10 years this week, issuing A$750m ($532.0m) to prove that there is still demand at decade-low levels.
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A pair of Asian banks tapped the Australian dollar bond market for a combined A$1.25bn ($880m) on Tuesday. A number of banks have visited the Aussie market in recent weeks to great success, and more are set to follow.
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Singapore’s United Overseas Bank issued a A$500m ($362.2m) bond in Australia on Friday, as a lack of financial paper in the market drove investor demand.
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Singapore’s DBS Bank ventured into the Kangaroo market on Wednesday in search of tier two debt. Though Australian dollar tier two volumes have remained stable year on year, there is a marked decline in offshore issuance so far in 2020.
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Australia’s fourth syndication of its financial year has set a new size record — the third time it has done so in as many months — but despite the wave of Australian govvie supply, demand still seems fierce.
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The Australian Office of Financial Management (AOFM) has launched its fourth syndication of its 2020/21 year.
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The Australian Office of Financial Management (AOFM) has announced that it will syndicate a new six year deal next week – marking the first time the sovereign has sold more than three syndications in a single fiscal year.
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Unibail-Rodamco-Westfield, one of the world's largest owners of shopping malls, launched a €9bn-plus turnaround plan on Thursday, which includes a €3.5bn rights issue. The aim of is to reduce its leverage to help it withstand the Covid-19 pandemic.
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The New Zealand Treasury reduced its 2020/21 funding programme by NZ$10bn ($6.75bn) to NZ$50bn on Wednesday as its economy shows signs of a quicker recovery than seemed likely after the coronavirus lockdown earlier this year.
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The World Bank raised NZ$550m ($369.9m) with a rare seven-year New Zealand dollar bond, breaking the record for the largest Kauri bond at that maturity or longer.
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The Queensland Treasury Corporation (QTC) announced on Monday that it plans to borrow A$21bn ($15.2bn) during its 2020/21 fiscal year, which runs between July 1 and June 30. Alongside this, the state signalled its intention to look at issuing green, foreign currency and long term debt to complement its benchmark programme.