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  • Santander UK was set to issue the first ever covered bond linked to Sofr on Tuesday, as part of a dual-tranche offering that established a number of other firsts. The deal included the first 144A dollar covered bond from a UK issuer since 2012, the first seven year covered deal linked to Sonia, and it also marked the first time that a borrower has sold dollar and sterling covered bonds simultaneously.
  • Barclays and JP Morgan were this week marketing the senior notes of Futura 2019 for Guber Banca and Varde at mid-300bps over six month Euribor. The deal gives investors a rare chance to buy publicly syndicated investment grade exposure to Italian non-performing loans.
  • The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) has given the go-ahead for trading in rupee futures and options, allowing the development of offshore markets in the products.
  • If the US assassination of an Iranian general and the coronavirus outbreak cannot derail emerging market bonds, then what will? Not much, it seems, Perhaps not even the likely disruption of Donald Trump’s run for re-election this year. Technical factors supporting demand are so strong that investors are blinded by the silver linings surrounding every dark cloud on their horizons.
  • Caffil found good demand for a tightly priced €750m 20 year covered bond on Tuesday — the longest maturing deal issued by a core European bank so far this year. Hamburger Sparkasse was able to launch an eight year Pfandbrief benchmark in the same window, also without giving away much of a premium.
  • SEB found calm conditions in the euro market this week as it paid a small new issue premium to launch a bail-inable senior bond on the back of its recent results announcement.
  • Three substantial block trades re-opened the EMEA blocks market with a bang on Monday. The deals in French payments company Worldline, London-listed airline Wizz Air and Swiss testing laboratories company SGS totalled about $4.7bn equivalent and showed that equity capital markets have largely recovered from fears over the spread of coronavirus, which weighed on issuance volumes last week.
  • Atos has sold most of its remaining shares in Wordline, the French payments company, via an accelerated bookbuild.
  • CEE
    The Republic of Poland has printed €1.5bn 0% 2025s on Monday, selling the deal at 100.512 to give the first ever negative yield in euros — minus 0.102% — from any global EM issuer.
  • SSA
    Trading levels given are bid-side spreads versus mid-swaps and/or an underlying benchmark and bid-yields from the close of business on Monday, February 3. The source for secondary trading levels is ICE Data Services.
  • Bonds sold by Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena were surging higher in secondary market trading this week, amid reports that the Italian bank was close to agreeing plans to offload a €10bn portfolio of non-performing loans.
  • Yury Kiselev has been promoted at Société Générale to head of debt capital markets for central and eastern Europe, the Commonwealth of Independent States and Russia.