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Large auctions, new 30 year and ‘two-lens' pricing approach among key expectations for bloc’s July-December funding
◆ DMO chief Jessica Pulay on why 2041s won out ◆ Swift execution 'a hallmark' of transaction ◆ Cover ratio slips but breadth holds firm
◆ Debate whether priced through US Treasuries ◆ Tighter than fixed ◆ Tenor handed investors optically pleasing spread

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  • The covered bond and sovereign, supranational and agency sectors were well very well bid on Tuesday despite supply from the European Union and US T-Bill auctions. Even though US inflation is proving to be much higher than expected, dovish comments from the European Central Bank and the expectation of lower supply over the summer kept the mood light in secondary markets.
  • SSA
    The Inter-American Development Bank and the Province of British Columbia sold well subscribed dollar deals on Tuesday but volatility could be on the radar after US inflation data beat expectations.
  • The European Union launched a pair of benchmarks on Tuesday, completing its pre-summer funding requirement and landing €15.25bn from a book of €147bn.
  • The UK impressed onlookers with its sale of the second syndicated conventional Gilt of its 2021/22 financial year on Tuesday.
  • Pundits in the ESG space are already levelling disappointed criticisms at the ECB’s new green monetary policy strategy. But while it may not be perfect, it is important to recognise that the ECB has taken a valuable and important step forward.
  • FIG
    The primary capital markets had a difficult end to last week as issuers found it increasingly challenging to execute deals. Although stable in most markets, the average concessions paid in the corporate bond market edged upwards and continued to climb in the FIG market.
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