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  • CEE
    The Republic of Turkey on Thursday returned to the capital markets for the second time this month, launching a €1.25bn six year bond and taking advantage of a recent buying spree in the country’s bonds.
  • Société Générale this week issued a highly oversubscribed €1bn eight year that paved the way for follow-on French covered bonds from Credit Mutuel CIC — which attracted a €5bn order book for its two part deal — and La Banque Postale.
  • The European Investment Bank, European Commission and EU member states are struggling to decide how to run InvestEU, a €47bn guarantee from the EU budget supposed to support €650bn in investment, as a successor to the Juncker plan. The Commission is seeking more direct control, while the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development is also after a bigger role.
  • A few years ago, artificial intelligence was only the hipster’s choice for ‘most important tech innovation in finance’. But AI is fast supplanting blockchain as The Next Big Thing in capital markets. There is a theory that cool things are no longer cool once finance types start to like them. So, in that spirit here’s ByteMe’s guide to the perils of an AI dystopia.
  • Korea Western Power (Kowepo) chose an appropriate week to launch the first ever green bond in Swiss francs from an emerging market issuer – and not just because sustainability was high on the agenda at Davos. The deal also came in a week in which representatives from the IFC and the Swiss Secretariat for Economic Affairs (SECO) met in Bern to discuss the results of a consultation on impact investing among more than 100 members of the Association of Swiss Sustainable Finance (SSF).
  • French hotel company Accor launched new hybrid and senior bond issues on Thursday after announcing the deals at the end of last week. The new deals finance tender offers for some of the company’s existing hybrid and senior notes.
  • US and regional banks took advantage of strong market conditions this week, but could not stop high-grade dollar FIG supply enduring its worst start to a year since 2016.
  • High grade corporates are champing at the bit to access the dollar market as credit spreads continue to rally and investors continue to put money to work.
  • Germany’s largest residential property company Vonovia attracted €4.5bn of demand for its latest deal on Thursday, as the property sector continues to be one of the more popular in the corporate bond market.
  • IBM returned to the euro corporate bond market for the first time since 2017 on Thursday, to sell its largest ever deal in the euro market and to push into a maturity not seen from a corporate issuer so far in 2019.
  • Regardless of when the US government shutdown ends, it will likely have wrought chaos on this year’s IPO market. Staff at the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) have already been locked out of their offices for more than 34 days, frustrating a multitude of issuers that are waiting for the regulator to comment on their registration documentation. Sam Kerr reports.
  • KBC Group was able to approach fair value with a senior bond offering on Monday, as the positivity of the previous few sessions had encouraged less frequent issuers like it and Sydbank to try the market.