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◆ Sovereign rides post-EU momentum, beats size target ◆ Deal priced flat to fair value ◆ Thuringia oversubscribed but Länder books shrink
French government vote and EU syndication to shape market in coming days
◆ Other recent German deals finished uncovered ◆ RV against KfW was important ◆ Some argue outcome 'not great'
◆ Third SSA in a week gets low demand ◆ Starting level 'seemed good approach' but fails to draw appetite ◆ Coupon level gives hope in secondary trading
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A cavalcade of “familiar names” have come to the market over the last week. SSAs, corporates and FIG issuers printed across the euro curve, while a trio of supranationals were also active in emerging market currencies.
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The State of North Rhine Westphalia mandated banks on Monday for a 30 year euro benchmark, ahead of a highly anticipated European Central Bank meeting later in the week, in which analysts expect the central bank to hint at a rate cut in September.
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Korea Western Power Co (Kowepo), the power supplier owned by state-backed Korea Electric Power Corp, sold $300m of three year notes on Monday, riding on strong demand from sovereign wealth funds and central banks.
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A trio of issuers burst into the sovereign, supranational and agency dollar market on Monday, as syndicate officials say they have been pleasantly surprised by how quickly the sector bounced back after a tricky period.
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India’s plan to sell foreign currency bonds for the first time has prompted eager speculation among debt bankers in Asia. While bankers disagree over when the deal will launch and exactly what fair value will be, many expect the deal to come with a razor-thin spread. Silas Brown reports.