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Second digital project won’t be the issuer’s last, Länder peers may be ‘interested and willing’ to join in
◆ Half-year close keeps some issuers on sidelines ◆ Bankers expect big euro supply to come ◆ More concession on pricing could be required
A Kilt will pay a spread over Gilts it cannot justify on credit, which makes it a political gesture rather than a funding tool
Guillaume Pichard, assistant deputy minister, on the five year call, the repo boost and the cost versus home
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Germany printed its first federal-regional bond, a Bund-Laender-Anheile (BLA), on Wednesday afternoon at a slight premium to mid-swaps in the first benchmark to grace the public sector debt markets in a week.
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Senior SSA bankers predicted a concentration of power into the hands of a few bulge bracket firms following the demise of UBS’s SSA franchise in late 2012. But, as Ralph Sinclair discovers, the broader picture is far more complicated as a swathe of banks have rushed in to serve SSA issuers.
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SSA bankers predicted that the week’s new issue supply could be confined to sovereign borrowers, as the volatility which engulfed markets late last week shows little sign of abating.
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The Finanzagentur unveiled on Thursday which states will participate in the inaugural Bund-Laender-Anheile.
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Five banks have won the mandate to run investor meetings for Germany’s first joint federal-regional bond — a Bund-Laender-Anheile — with a view to selling a euro benchmark.
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The State of Lower Saxony raised €500m of five year money on Monday afternoon. The issuer plumped for a floating rate issue, which boosted investor demand in a volatile rates environment ahead of this week’s Federal Open Market Committee meeting.