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  • Rating: Aaa/AAA/AA+
  • Swedbank raids Danske for frequent borrowers - HSBC hires head of Germany CIB - Danske beefs up in FIG origination
  • SSA
    A German sub-sovereign astonished the SSA market this week, selling a 50 year benchmark to show that, despite the expectations of rising rates in euros, some investors at least are still happy to put money into assets at the ultra-long end. Lewis McLellan reports.
  • A pair of seasoned green bond issuers brought deals in the format this week — but each opted to print in a currency in which it had not sold green bonds before.
  • A pair of European agencies have increased their funding target ranges for 2018 as they prepare for the second half of the year.
  • The US CLO market has shrugged off the interruption of July 4th festivities, with five managers closing new deals so far in the shortened week and a raft of other issuers closing refinancing and reset transactions.
  • FIG
    Banks and insurers look set to pounce upon any more stable market days over the coming weeks to print deals before they enter blackout periods and the summer shutdown. Several took that approach this week by bringing deals on Wednesday, which was US Independence Day.
  • Rating: —/A/A-
  • The Netherlands could be at the beginning of a crackdown on tax benefits for additional tier one (AT1) capital, after the European Commission said that state aid concerns had convinced it to take aim at provisions that allow banks and insurers to deduct tax from interest paid on the instruments.
  • It is common for a firm to have an association with an adjective. The description is often derogatory, so acquisitive companies are often said to be rapacious. For Glencore, the commonly used adjective is secretive.
  • Equity capital markets are firmly gearing up for summer and investors are looking beyond to autumn and the next batch of European IPOs. But many are limiting their expectations given the number of high quality companies this year that have been sold privately, rather than through an IPO.
  • Speculation is rife that the European Central Bank will mimic the US Federal Reserve’s ‘Operation Twist’ from a few years ago, focusing reinvestments from redeeming bonds bought under the public sector purchase programme into long dated paper. While there has been some impact from the news, any benefit is likely to be limited.