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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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Hot on the heels of a pair of popular — and super-tight — dollar trades from supranationals in the first half of this week, Sweden’s SEK and Province of Manitoba pushed to get investor attention further out the curve.
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A syndicate of 26 lenders have provided a €30bn syndicated loan to allow Spain’s regional and city governments to pay off debts to their suppliers.
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A book of $4.5bn for the Province of Ontario’s $3.5bn three year dollar global, which was priced yesterday, underlined the overwhelming demand that exists for SSA names remote from the European sovereign debt crisis. Denmark saw it earlier in the week and Sweden a week ago.
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Ontario became the latest borrower to capitalise on strong demand this week for short-dated dollars on Wednesday — the issuer was set to price a three year trade in the afternoon.
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The State of North-Rhine Westphalia sold a €500m seven year note on Monday, as Greek-induced volatility kept many other issuers in euros away.
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The South Australian Government Financing Authority (SAFA) sold its largest commercial paper trade to date on Tuesday, as it continued to fund in dollars and tapped into investor demand for diversification.