RBC Capital Markets
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KfW and Québec will bring Canadian dollar bonds to the market on Thursday, with the former looking to issue in the currency for the first time since 2015.
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A pair of triple-A SSA borrowers built heavily oversubscribed books — and one printed its largest ever deal — on Wednesday in a dollar market that is still attracting heavy demand and performing in secondary despite already tight levels.
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A strong start to the year for public sector dollar issuance is keeping up the pace so far this week, with last week’s slowdown during the Chinese New Year holidays only appearing to make investors hungrier. Both of Tuesday’s dollar deals were well oversubscribed — one spectacularly so — and there is a full card of issuers waiting to come on Wednesday.
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KfW found plenty of appetite in the sterling market on Monday, allowing it to increase its target size during the book build for a tap, before printing an even larger size of £750m. FMS Wertmanagement will add to the sterling supply on Tuesday after picking banks for its second fixed rate benchmark in the currency this year.
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Blackstone Property Partners Europe on Friday made its third visit to the corporate bond market in eight months and opted for a maturity between its two outstanding bonds. The property fund has now printed €1.75bn of bonds since it sold its Logicor logistics business to China Investment Corp in June 2017.
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It does not make sense for the UK Debt Management Office (DMO) to change its index for inflation linked bonds before the government has decided on its preferred measure of inflation, said market participants, responding to a report from the country’s politicians.
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Analysts at the research house CreditSights expect that Canadian banks could soon start issuing more senior bonds for their total loss-absorbing capacity requirements (TLAC), having held back from the market after taking care of their funding needs with older forms of senior debt.
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Theresa May may not have brought any further clarity to the UK’s Brexit agreement, but that is not causing any issues for investors and issuers in the sterling corporate bond market. On Tuesday, two more deals were priced: one from a UK issuer, one from a European.
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The UK Debt Management Office showed no effects from the ‘noisy UK environment’ to comfortably conclude its 2018/19 syndicated programme on Tuesday. KfW will add to the sterling SSA supply this week after picking banks for its third benchmark in the currency this year.