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Meanwhile, Gulf borrowers head private as Iran war volatility keeps public flow thin
◆ Gulf issuers turn to private markets ◆ Public sector and corporate borrowers to bring forward plans ◆ Banks re-enter covered and unsecured funding markets
Easter holidays and Middle East volatility subdued regular private placement activity though Gulf states step up private funding
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Brussels jumped into the long end this week, printing the longest MTN in over a month.
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Muenchener Hypothekenbank (MunHyp) harnessed the growing demand for environmental, social and corporate governance (ESG) paper in the Swiss market to land a tap 7bp through the bid side this week. Elsewhere, Toyota ended a 12 year absence from the Swiss franc market to sell the currency’s first automobile deal of the year.
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Dutch agencies were active in core currency MTN markets earlier this week, including FMO, which sold its first currency-linked bond for almost a year.
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CPPIB Capital made its debut in South African rand this week with an ‘old school MTN’ at the short end of the curve.
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Belgium dropped into the long end of the euro curve to place a 100 year bond this week – its first private placement for seven months.
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The Asian Development dropped into the dim sum market on Wednesday to sell the first note from an SSA issuer in almost three weeks. Despite the recent absence of SSA names, the asset class is on pace for a record year.