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Issuance across euros and dollars is set to rise
◆ EuGB label attracts second French agency ◆ Tight pricing to existing secondaries ◆ Label, no-grow language and marketing all help
Recent primary deals were well received, but some fatigue is creeping in as new deals line up
◆ 'No investor pushback' at tight spread over govvies ◆ Tenor was longest possible ◆ Private placement opportunities
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Korea Development Bank returned to the bond market on Monday with a three-tranche transaction, marketing one of the notes with a green label. Despite pricing its trade at one of the tightest levels seen among the country’s lenders, the borrower still received strong demand.
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Caisse d'Amortissement de la Dette Sociale hit screens on Monday morning to announce a 10 year dollar benchmark, following the example set by Inter-American Development Bank’s enormous success in the tenor last week.
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Sterling deals have received a superb investor response so far this year but perhaps none more so than Monday’s record setting Sonia floater from the European Investment bank.
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The first public deals of the year in the long end of the euro curve from the supranational and agency sector arrived on Monday, with the trades receiving huge demand and pricing exceptionally tight to secondary levels.
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A senior funding manager at KfW who was responsible for leading the borrower’s sterling and dollar deals, has left the German agency.
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CPPIB Capital mandated the banks to lead its first ever 20 year euro benchmark on Friday, in what is also the first mandate announcement for a benchmark transaction by a non-sovereign/sub-sovereign public sector borrower in the long end of the euro curve in 2021.