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  • IHS Nigeria printed the largest ever deal from an African sub-investment grade issuer on Wednesday, raising $800m with a five year non-call two. The deal is testimony to Africa’s improving infrastructure scene, and sets a strong tone for Access Bank, which finished roadshows this week.
  • Guarantor: Federal Republic of Germany
  • Rating: Aa1/AAA
  • Guarantor: Financial Market Stabilisation Fund of the Federal Republic of Germany
  • Rating: Aa3/AA/AA-
  • A sell-off in eurozone government debt last week, over rumours that the European Central Bank might start tapering its quantitative easing programme, may have helped issuers bring more shorter dated deals in euros this week than have been possible for months — but some issuers are wary that more volatility could be ahead.
  • London’s MTN world was alarmed to hear the news that a gorilla had escaped from its enclosure and was rampaging towards(ish) Canary Wharf.
  • Including redemptions and central bank buying, the investable eurozone covered bond market has shrunk almost €80bn so far this year. No surprise, then, that three seven year deals issued this week by Ibercaja, Banco Sabadell and Bank of Montreal were swamped with demand.
  • SSA
    The European Stability Mechanism is close to deciding on the format its first dollar benchmark will be printed in, while a deal due this Friday could open up to longer dated tenors what has already been an extremely strong dollar market in the three year part of the curve.
  • Insurance companies taking leveraged loan exposure through open ended funds, rather than CLOs, should cause alarm. Given the liquidity risk inherent in the structures, regulators ought to be watchful.
  • The words “unintended consequences of regulation” usually send a shiver down the spine of capital markets participants, but new US rules coming into effect next week are having the opposite effect for some public sector bond issuers.
  • FIG
    Bawag PSK became the first bank to print a senior unsecured note offering a negative yield in Swiss market history this Wednesday. Swiss bankers wonder how the small A3 rated Austrian borrower managed to sneak into the record books.