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  • The bigger surprise in the financial institutions debt market this week was not that Banco Santander decided to extend the life of an additional tier one bond, but rather that the subordinated debt market took the decision in its stride.
  • The international capital market welcomed a new supranational borrower on Monday when Bolivia-based Fonplata issued a debut Sfr150m five year bond via Credit Suisse and UBS.
  • Saudi Aramco is rumoured to have mandated banks for a bond planned later this year, but bankers and investors believe there is still a long road before a deal emerges.
  • Consumer ABS issuance has been shifting gradually from publicly registered offerings to 114A private placements since 2014, according to Wells Fargo research published this week. The change in distribution could mean less demand for ABS from investors that need larger, liquid public deals.
  • CEE
    Credit Bank of Moscow printed a €500m five year bond on Tuesday, taking advantage of positive sentiment towards Russian bonds that existed early in the week before new talk of fresh US sanctions on Russia later dented enthusiasm for the country’s credit.
  • Investors backed the return of the Balearic Islands to the bond markets on Tuesday with the Spanish region selling its biggest ever single tranche bond. It was able to attract huge demand despite the threat of a snap general election in Spain — a prospect that looked increasingly likely as the week neared its end.
  • Highgate School is marketing a US private placement (USPP), according to two USPP players. The market has become a home for private and public schools looking for long-term financing.
  • UBS is re-balancing its corporate finance business to end its reliance on its Financial Institutions Group with impressive results, writes David Rothnie.
  • The US corporate new issuance calendar took a breather on Thursday after clocking up its busiest week of the year with $30bn of supply in just three days. Borrowers remained on the sidelines as investors digested the supply onslaught that brought bulging order books and tight pricing.
  • Greene King is planning to tap its Greene King Finance ‘pub securitization’ by issuing £250m of fixed rate notes following a three day roadshow that kicked off on Wednesday.
  • Uzbekistan opened a new chapter in emerging market bonds on Wednesday, printing a $1bn dual tranche deal. Market participants are expecting a swathe of other issuers from the country to follow the sovereign into the capital markets, although soggy trading on Thursday has stiffened investor resolve to hold firmer on pricing on subsequent Uzbek deals, writes Francesca Young.
  • Two Nordic telecoms companies sold euro corporate bonds this week after both spending nearly two years on the sidelines. Both employed no-grow strategies, and Swedish company Telia sold the longest maturity corporate bond deal of 2019 so far.