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  • A pair of public sector borrowers blew away the cobwebs in the sterling market on Wednesday, printing a combined £1.5bn.
  • ABS
    Regulators responsible for drawing up the technical standards for the 'simple, transparent, standardised' (STS) framework for European securitization have published five draft consultation papers, seeking industry comment through March.
  • Citi finished 2017 in its highest ever position in the EMEA league tables, leading from the front in ECM. David Rothnie asks whether it can topple JP Morgan.
  • In 2017 the continuation of the ECB’s Corporate Sector Purchase Programme helped dampen volatility in the corporate bond market, allowed spreads to continue a long grind tighter and persuaded a diverse range of issuers to access the market. Debut issuers took advantage of some of the best ever conditions for issuance, while others returned after many years.
  • FIG
    In many ways, the financial institutions bond market ran away with itself in 2017. Spreads formed one-way traffic, grinding relentlessly tighter, even as some corners of the market convinced themselves a correction was imminent.
  • SSA
    After a year in which a myriad potential political risks failed to materialise and SSAs enjoyed extremely strong conditions, GlobalCapital used our editorial judgement, with inspiration from our world-famous Bond Comments and patented BondMarker app, to pick what we felt were the top trades of the year.
  • Investment grade corporate bond market players only had to wait one day for the first new deals of 2018. Renault and BMW both brought new paper to market on Wednesday, selling a total of €2.75bn of bonds with little premium.
  • Bank of Nova Scotia and Lloyds Bank both offered covered bonds in the floating rate note format to sterling investors on Wednesday, while Stadshypotek announced a mandate for a similar deal.
  • Compagnie de Finacement Foncier (CFF) was unable to attract a swell of demand for its 10 year, possibly due to the tight starting spread. In contrast, yield hungry investors flocked to ABN Amro’s mega-sized 15 year offering.
  • Caixabank brought the first covered bond deal of the year from Europe’s periphery on Wednesday but its offering appeared to struggle for attention on a busy day in the covered bond market.
  • FIG
    Non-US financial institutions have favoured going to the dollar market for unsecured offerings in the first two days of the year, with Crédit Agricole looking to raise tier two capital in the currency on Wednesday.
  • Oman became the first CEEMEA borrower to hit the screens this year with an official mandate. It has named five lead managers to arrange a triple tranche dollar bond as it looks to fund a Omr3bn ($7.8bn) budget deficit for 2018.