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  • Axa started the bond market portion of the financing of its acquisition of XL Group on Wednesday, attracting books of more than €4.1bn for a tier two debt deal.
  • Bank of Nova Scotia (BNS) was this week obliged to pay a generous new issue premium for its second euro benchmark of the year, reflecting weaker credit conditions, investor indigestion and its desire to issue in large size.
  • The 2018 IPO market is up and running with investors keen to buy into new listings given the generous selling strategies of issuers.
  • 2018 has proven a difficult year for the IG corporate bond market so far. Instead of the smooth waters of 2017, conditions have been more choppy and issuers and their syndicates have had to navigate a more careful path to market and often paying more to insulate investors from secondary market volatility. However, there are likely to be more difficult conditions ahead with fewer support mechanisms available.
  • Investors are calling on the UK Debt Management Office to extend the sovereign’s curve with its next syndication, as the buy-side cheered an agreement on a Brexit transition deal.
  • Credit Suisse has put at risk of redundancy three of its emerging markets sales team in New York. Meanwhile, its EM traders based there have been absorbed into a different part of the bank. The move comes after the Swiss firm put two EM debt capital markets bankers in London at risk earlier this month.
  • FIG
    Investors are receiving a decent concession to buy new paper in the FIG market, and this has encouraged them to jump out of outstanding bonds, thus widening the curve further for new issuers. And covered bonds buyers are also gaining the upper hand, as the European Central bank pulls out.
  • The wide ranging issuance of bonds from the CEEMEA market that has come to define the primary market in recent weeks has finally slowed, with few new deals expected this week. An investor in London said that enthusiasm for the paper was waning after book sizes had clearly dropped and new paper was underperforming.
  • Republic of Mozambique met bondholders in London on Tuesday to lay out the terms of a long awaited restructuring package that was more severe than anticipated by one analyst in London. Analysts do not expect bondholders to accept the offer, but said it likely sets a floor for future negotiations.
  • Two senior bankers have joined Deutsche Bank’s CEEMEA team, while Maryam Khosrowshahi is adding to her role with the new title of chairperson of supranational, sovereign and agencies origination.
  • Commodities trader Noble Group decided not to repay a $379m bond that matured this week, triggering an event of default. But the latest development got little reaction from the market, as the company has long been in the process of restructuring almost $3.4bn of debt.
  • Hong Kong-listed New World Development has converted a loan signed in March 2016 into a green loan, a first of its kind for the company and in line with its plan to promote sustainability across its business.