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  • Latin America primary enjoyed a rare bustling start to December this week with three deals catching the eye for different reasons, despite several market participants saying they were ready for a calmer end to the year.
  • CEE
    Emerging market borrowers seem to be enjoying unfettered access to the capital markets, but many are now questioning whether this Covid-induced debt spree can be sustained in the long run. With fiscal support packages likely to be needed in 2021, investors will be sifting through EM governments to see which will be able to borrow and which will be left behind, writes Mariam Meskin.
  • Argentina’s second largest provincial issuer, Córdoba, improved its consent solicitation to bondholders on Thursday, increasing proposed coupon payments. The offer comes as Argentine provincial debt talks gain momentum, but Córdoba is still some way off its bondholder group’s latest proposal — though the creditor committee has not yet reacted to the improved offer.
  • The dollar bond market is wide open for companies to take advantage of strong demand and a rally in spreads, boosting hopes for a busy end to a record year for investment grade issuance.
  • Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena led a trio of speculative grade Italian banks into the euro bond market this week, as credit investors showed that no issuers were off limit in their increasingly desperate search for yield. Tyler Davies reports.
  • SRI
    Three of the biggest asset managers, BlackRock, Vanguard and State Street, are still voting against most shareholder motions on climate change, human rights and other sustainability issues, despite their insistence that they take environmental and social matters seriously. Often their ‘no’ votes are decisive in blocking resolutions — even though most are only asking for better disclosure.
  • Jean Pierre Mustier's departure from UniCredit may help Italy in an attempt — shared by governments and supervisors around Europe — to push the banking sector to help solve economic policy problems during the pandemic.
  • Sustainability-linked bonds (SLBs) have hogged much of the limelight in the socially responsible investment markets this year. But transition bonds, which had fallen out of favour for some time, have demonstrated there is clear demand for the product, following a strong deal for Snam this week and guidelines due for release in the coming days, writes Mike Turner.
  • Green bond specialists have criticised the buildings section of the European Union’s proposed sustainable finance taxonomy as impractical as it creates unhelpful incentives that exclude most bank financing, including green senior unsecured, RMBS and covered bonds.
  • SSA
    Competition among public sector borrowers will be more ferocious than ever when 2021 begins, due to supersized borrowing programmes created to deal with the coronavirus pandemic, the European Union’s arrival as a big issuer and a lack of decent funding windows in January, writes Burhan Khadbai.
  • Guarantor: Federal State of Baden‑Württemberg
  • Opportunistic corporate issuers had a strong week of it in Europe's bond market, increasing deal sizes and enjoying bulging order books as investors turned positive on the outlook for the market.