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  • Peruvian food retail and pharmacy group InRetail Consumer took advantage of calmer markets and the scarcity value of Peruvian corporates to achieve higher oversubscription and greater pricing compression than any Latin American new issue since February 18. on the way to a $600m seven year on Thursday.
  • As financial institutions across asset classes raised gender-themed funding this week, Colombia’s vice-president Marta Lucía Ramirez took International Women’s Day as a chance to hail the potential of the sovereign using bond markets to fund its gender equality initiatives.
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  • Hundreds of things happened this week in sustainable finance. That’s normal now — it’s become a fizzing, global market which is ever-present. Anyone who predicted, say, four years ago that sustainable finance would take over the whole capital market probably feels the outcome has exceeded their expectations.
  • There are more risks than rewards for banks in the primary market right now.
  • Any fears about the resilience of the US corporate bond market were set aside on Thursday when Verizon Communications amassed a $115bn orderbook and printed one of the biggest deals of the year.
  • CEE
    Turkey's international bond market access is once again in question. Rising US Treasury yields have put affordable dollar funding beyond the sovereign for now, bankers believe, undoing the good done by a move back to orthodox monetary policy late last year, after months of inflation and a plunging lira. A rate hike next week may help restore issuance prospects, writes Mariam Meskin.
  • European banks will exercise extreme caution in dollars after an ill-fated senior deal from Swedbank this week. It could signal the end of a long run of ultra-easy borrowing conditions in US credit markets, with severe volatility stemming from fears of rising interest rates. Tyler Davies reports.
  • Nobody could say ECB president Christine Lagarde did not deliver. The central bank promised on Thursday that the pace of buying for its Pandemic Emergency Purchase Programme would be “significantly increased” for the next quarter. Bond market participants were relieved, with one saying it has been “built on egg shells”, writes Lewis McLellan.
  • FIG deal arrangers breathed a sigh of relief as the European Central Bank doubled down on its support for bonds this week. They expect to be able to build on the ECB’s latest statement, following a tricky period for primary credit markets.
  • CLO markets have snapped back to pre-Covid levels and structures, but with two major differences — easier rating rules from Moody’s and the rush to allow managers flexibility to own workout loans. While the Moody's changes have been accepted by the market, workout loans remain more controversial, but are gaining traction as the flood of resets permits managers to update their docs.