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Green and Social Bonds and Loans

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◆ HSBC brings €3.25bn of funding across three tranches ◆ Lloyds opts for €750m single tranche before UK local elections ◆ Heavy euro FIG issuance as possible Iran deal announced
◆ Dutch bank goes 'head to head' with Alphabet in euros ◆ Brings its longest ever opco tranche ◆ Book skewed towards two year FRN
◆ French issuer tightens spread by impressive 8bp ◆ CFF's fourth covered bond in past two months ◆ Spread of 51bp was flat to fair value, says banker
International borrowers dominate this week's flow in the currency
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  • India’s Adani Green Energy has raised a $1.35bn green loan to support the construction of projects under its renewable portfolio.
  • Several companies backed away from issuing dollar bonds on Thursday, after a dovish message by the Federal Reserve’s Open Market Committee on Wednesday failed to stem the rates sell-off. But Toyota Motor trusted that the market would be resilient and went ahead with its first industrial green bond.
  • Deutsche Bank and Standard Chartered sold their first green and sustainable bonds in dollars this week, giving US investors a chance pick up supply that would normally be expected to arrive in euros.
  • A debut green covered bond from OP Mortgage Bank, and a green Pfandbrief from Berlin Hyp, that were issued this week priced through mid-swaps and tighter than any other covered bonds issued so far this year, yet they still managed to attract broad and diversified demand.
  • Rabobank has developed a bilateral loan facility with a margin linked to food waste, in an attempt to homogenise parts of the otherwise bespoke sustainability-linked loan market, but not everyone is convinced that there will be much use for a one size fits all approach to KPIs.
  • France became the latest European sovereign bond issuer to confront the problem of inflated orders with the sale of its second green OAT via syndication on Tuesday. But instead of bringing the spread in to price extremely tight like Italy and Spain did earlier in the year, France instead attempted to control the sale process by engaging with investors to persuade them not to put in excessive tickets in the first place. Burhan Khadbai reports.