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  • The US high grade bond market sprang back to life this week, as borrowers rode out a wave of volatility, helped by cash-rich investors and nimble pricing strategies.
  • Rating: Aaa/AAA
  • Recently marketed CLO documents circulated to investors have included language to suggest that the European Union could require Ireland to bring its VAT tax laws in line with the rest of the EU, raising fears that CLOs domiciled in the country could suffer a similar fate to Netherlands-based transactions.
  • The flow of money into bonds and equities in emerging markets in February slowed to its lowest level since the 'trade tantrum' last August, amid signs that the spread of the coronavirus has prompted a reassessment of country risk.
  • The most brutal equity market sell-off since the 2008 financial crisis rocked equity capital markets last week. But the primary market remains open, with investors open to block trades and the increased volatility benefitting convertible bonds, report Sam Kerr and Aidan Gregory.
  • Speak to enough sell-side capital markets bankers and a few patterns start to emerge. For all the talk of putting the client first and understanding their needs, the advice from syndicate and DCM shows a certain bias towards doing bond deals.
  • The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) on Tuesday slashed rates to a new low of 0.5% in response to the financial impact of the Covid-19 coronavirus outbreak. As Aussie dollar rates move lower, the introduction of quantitative easing is on the cards.
  • Shares in guarantor loans company Amigo Holdings plunged more than 25% at the open on Thursday while its high yield bond, a 7.625% 2024, was marked down more than 30 points, as founder James Benamor quit the board, then published a lengthy blog post describing the company as "committing slow motion suicide". Amigo hit back quickly with a statement rejecting many of Benamor’s comments but prices failed to bounce back.
  • Market participants will be keeping a close eye on how a deal from the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) will proceed next week, as it could well re-open the euro supranational and agency bond market after issuers shied away from doing deals this week, amid volatile market conditions and an improved cross-currency basis swap for euro funders to issue in dollars.
  • Thierry Roland has been picked to lead HSBC’s new RWA Optimisation Unit, where the bank will put assets that do not meet its return requirement.
  • Aberdeen Standard's Milligan to quit — Daiwa's Hultgren leaves over Frankfurt relocation — MUFG picks Domann
  • ABS
    NEoT Offgrid Africa (NOA) has completed a microfinance securitization of sub-Saharan African solar trade receivables with arrangers with Société Générale and Credit Agricole to help fund renewable electricity across the Ivory Coast.