Swedish Export Credit Corporation
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Swedish agency prints $1bn with ease as orders exceeds $4.1bn
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SSAs weigh up more pre-funding next year
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KfW finds investors reluctant to pay a greenium
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SEK and SFIL prep dollar bonds as KfW and ALS ready euro supply
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Neither issuer has left much on the table for investors
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Borrower to cast wide net after completing over half its annual funding task
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Wave of deals comes after some borrowers had shunned dollars for months or years
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The dollar SSA rush continues as ECB and Fed meetings approach
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SEK re-entered Kangaroo market as public sector borrowers added to old lines
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More public sector issuers look to Australian currency for funding
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Canadian issuer takes supply above £3bn for the year with fresh deal in currency to follow on Tuesday
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No book updates given once spread was set 2bp wide of initial level
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Trio of transactions gives market confidence with more issuance expected
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The issuer jumped through a short pre-FOMC issuance window this week to price a dollar bond
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Swedish issuer scoops €700m on euro return
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Fed stays on course but spread to Treasuries makes dollars a tough place for public sector borrowers
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UK central bank three times oversubscribed while SEK struggles to cover book
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Issuers hope for calm after dollar market was volatile during recent trades
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This week's scorecard looks at the progress Nordic agencies have made in their funding programmes in early May.
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This week's scorecard looks at the progress Nordic agencies have made in their funding programmes in early March.
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Swedish Export Credit Corporation on Thursday became sold the third three year dollar deal by a public sector borrower in as many days, showing ample demand for the short end of the dollar curve.
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KfW and Swedish Export Credit Corporation (SEK) achieved strong results in sterling on Tuesday despite extremely volatile conditions in the currency as a result of uncertainty around the impact of Brexit and the rising cases of coronavirus in the UK, which has affected swap spreads and the cross-currency basis swap for non-UK borrowers.
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This week's scorecard looks at the progress Nordic agencies have made in their 2020 funding programmes in mid-December, with some issuers also setting their targets for 2021.
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This week's scorecard looks at the progress Nordic agencies have made in their 2020 funding programmes at the end of October.
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Trading levels given are bid-side spreads versus mid-swaps and/or an underlying benchmark and bid-yields from the close of business on Monday, September 28. The source for secondary trading levels is ICE Data Services
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This week's scorecard looks at the progress Nordic agencies have made in their 2020 funding programmes in mid-September.
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Two agencies were out with dollar mandates on Monday and more public sector borrowers could follow with deals this week as a rise in US Treasury yields boosts demand for SSA dollar bonds.
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Trading levels given are bid-side spreads versus mid-swaps and/or an underlying benchmark and bid-yields from the close of business on Monday, July 27. The source for secondary trading levels is ICE Data Services.
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This week's scorecard looks at the progress Nordic agencies have made in their 2020 funding programmes in late July.
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Swedish Export Credit Corporation kept the public sector new issues market open on Thursday as it came with an opportunistic four year dollar trade on the back of a strong week for dollar borrowers.
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The European Stability Mechanism is likely to use its funding window scheduled for next week to issue a dollar benchmark, according to SSA bankers.
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Oatly, the Swedish oat milk producer, is taking on debt to finance building two new factories with its first ever syndicated loan, and naturally chose a sustainability-linked instrument, its chief financial officer said. Those hoping for an IPO will have to wait a while longer.
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Oatly, the Swedish company that makes oat milk, has signed a Skr1.925bn (€184m) club loan, on which the pricing can be adjusted if it hits sustainability targets.
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This week's scorecard looks at the progress Nordic agencies have made in their 2020 funding programmes in June.
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Sweden’s Volvo Car, a car maker, has become the latest company under pressure from the coronavirus pandemic to sign a state-guaranteed loan, as bankers say that state support is essential to secure commercial bank loans for the worst affected sectors.