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  • Finland is leaving the door open for a third syndicated bond in 2018, after receiving a record order book for its 10 year euro benchmark deal this week.
  • FIG
    Insurance firm Mapfre is planning to bring a subordinated bond to the euro market, after a week and a half of heavy supply in the senior format.
  • Landsbankinn’s tier two deal on Thursday carried an unremarkable size of just €100m. But more notable was that it was the first subordinated euro trade from an Icelandic bank since the crisis.
  • FIG
    Growing fears that the UK could crash out of the EU without a deal are starting to weigh heavily on UK banks. The country’s most prominent issuers are finding it harder to drum up support for their bond deals, as investors find plenty of alternatives elsewhere. Tyler Davies reports.
  • ABS
    Insurance companies tracked by Wells Fargo allocated 30% of their ABS purchases in the second quarter to whole business, timeshare and aircraft deals, as insurers load up on higher yielding paper.
  • Two of the euro corporate bond market’s more frequent issuers helped fully reopen the market with a pair of dual-tranche deals immediately following the UK August bank holiday. The quality of the credits was one of the reasons the market was able to digest €6.65bn of supply on the day.
  • In response to the European Commission’s draft covered bond directive, the European Central Bank has set out a number of recommendations that should boost the appeal of covered bonds for investors, though not necessarily with issuers.
  • German car leasing company Sixt has raised €200m in the Schuldschein market, part of which was sold through Helaba’s platform, VC Trade. As the market digitises, two platforms — one promoted by Helaba and one by LBBW — are pulling ahead of the pack. But three other platforms are nipping at their heels, positioning themselves where the other two find it harder to reach.
  • Investors in corporate speculative grade debt in Europe are returning with appetite to their desks as the summer break ends. While the primary markets have yet to reveal a clear opening pipeline of deals for September, some fund managers said there were grounds to feel confident.
  • ​New regulations have uncovered heaps of data that markets are struggling to handle. But as participants discover issues exist they did not realise existed, the data revolution will result in safer and more efficient markets for all.
  • SIX, an exchange company in Switzerland, is angling to take full advantage of the advent of distributed ledger technology (DLT). With its new digital asset platform, the company hopes to profit from easier securities settlement and a new method of raising capital that involves issuing cryptocurrency.