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  • A growing number of issuers are turning to exchangeable bonds to raise financing during the pandemic, with this week seeing a series of deals, including one from the Spanish banking foundation Criteria Caixa. Equity-linked bankers expect this issuance wave to continue as more clients seek to get in on the act. Aidan Gregory reports.
  • Banco Santander and Banque Fédérative du Crédit Mutuel found good demand for new green senior deals on Thursday, after they tested euro market conditions in the wake of a hawkish surprise from the US Federal Reserve.
  • Bank Julius Baer, the operating company of the private Swiss bank, took an unusual approach for its debut euro issue this week as it raised €500m of senior funding with the yield set at 0% from the outset.
  • ABS
    European ABS spreads have retraced to their tightest levels since before the 2008-09 financial crisis, with BMW Bank’s Bavarian Sky Compartment German Auto Lease 6 racing to price at 10bp, the tightest in the market since July 2007, according to EuroABS data.
  • Korean Housing Finance Corporation mandated leads for a euro covered bond on Thursday, to be issued under its social framework. At the same time, after this week’s trio of sterling covered bonds bankers believe there is scope for further Sonia-linked supply.
  • Wise, the UK financial technology company, is looking to make stock market history by becoming the first such firm to list on the London Stock Exchange through a direct listing. If the deal is a success, it will show other issuers a way to go public that avoids having to build an order book for an IPO in a difficult market.
  • After the worst year ever for UK retail, plunging valuations and landlord implosions, Brookfield is testing the capital markets’ appetite for a bet on the sector’s recovery, launching a CMBS deal backed by nine UK retail parks. The launch came on the same day that the UK government announced that landlords would be banned from evicting non-paying tenants for a further nine months. Owen Sanderson reports.
  • Philippine real estate investment trust MReit filed for IPO approval this week. It is targeting up to Ps27.3bn ($562.3m), which would make it the country’s largest Reit listing.
  • Naturgy Energy, the Spanish gas and electricity utility, has doubled the size of its revolving credit facility in an amend and extend exercise, the latest demonstration that the balance of power in the loan market remains firmly on the side of the borrowers.
  • Sweden became the latest European sovereign to access the ultra-long end of the curve this week as it launched its first 50 year bond, opening up the long end of the krona curve for other highly rated names.
  • Emerging market investors took the US Federal Reserve’s indication on Wednesday that it would hike rates in 2023 in their stride, allowing Kenya to come to the bond market on Thursday.
  • South Korean video game developer Krafton has set in motion an IPO of nearly $5bn, set to be the country’s largest ever listing — and the first of many chunky deals expected in the second half of the year. Jonathan Breen reports.