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  • Peru could receive a payout from its World Bank-issued catastrophe bond after an earthquake hit the country’s Amazon region on Sunday morning. Investors are expecting a 30% loss to principal, but this will not be confirmed for several weeks.
  • A quartet of public sector borrowers placed paper in the Australian dollar market this week. Two European SSAs priced sustainable and climate awareness bonds: the European Investment Bank priced its third climate awareness Kangaroo on Tuesday, while Bank Nederlandse Gemeenten brought its sustainability bond programme back to the Aussie market on Wednesday. Meanwhile, a pair of agencies raised funding in Australian dollars on Thursday: Export Development Canada and Eurofima both tapped Kangaroos.
  • A rough day for the corporate bond market on Wednesday did not bother Illinois Tool Works, which pressed ahead with its three tranche euro bond issue anyway. Focused on the yields, it did not mind paying higher spreads. Bankers said this was typical of the continuing wave of Reverse Yankee issuers.
  • Mizuho International has hired a euro CLO specialist for a newly created role, one of a number of hires in its global markets team for Europe, the Middle East and Asia following Asif Godall taking over the division in March.
  • Agence Française de Développement (AFD) struck a lonely figure in dollars this week with a $650m two year floating rate note on Wednesday, though syndicate bankers said that several borrowers are lining up to pull the trigger on trades in the first week of June.
  • The UK equity capital market showed its robustness this week with deals well-received amid political crises that show no sign of abating. Bankers are focused on bringing equity stories that can succeed despite the turmoil of Brexit, aware that investors will be selective and more are turning underweight on the country, writes Sam Kerr.
  • Rating: Aa3/AA-
  • Spa chain Massage Envy is coming to market with a $425m whole business securitization.
  • Bayport, the Mauritius-based microfinance company, issued the first African ESG bond outside the supranational sector, printing a $260m three year at 11.5% on Wednesday, and obtaining a social bond second opinion from Sustainalytics, at the suggestion of arranger DNB Markets.
  • The City of London Corporation, via its endowment fund ‘The City’s Cash’, is set to enter the US private placement (PP) market for the first time. The funds will be partly used to finance the consolidation of the Billingsgate, Smithfield and Spitalfields wholesale food markets at a new site in Dagenham, Essex.
  • Ecobank Transnational Inc, the pan-African bank based in Togo, tapped a $500m 9.5% 2024 bond it issued in April for a further $50m on Tuesday. But despite the note being printed flat to the outstanding, according to leads, and the original bond having rallied over 150bp in yield since pricing a month ago, the tap brought the deal in by another 25bp in secondary trading.
  • Risk management technology firm KRM22 has agreed to acquire Object+, a risk management and post-trade technology business.