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Issuer adjusts pricing strategy after market volatility spikes following collapse of US-Iran ceasefire
◆ Issuer leaves concession on the table to secure top accounts ◆ Pricing versus AFD deal ◆ Official institutions hold French agency spreads at the tights
◆ Sven Wabbels reveals four dimensions behind dual tranche call ◆ Seven year restraint as 1bp for four years more risk ◆ Pricing through Treasuries 'not a goal'
◆ Debut seven year priced through issuer's dollar curve, leads say ◆ Green label and no-grow size steady IFC through selloff ◆ Rival banker questions wisdom of July inaugural
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Finland’s Municipality Finance returned to the domestic New Zealand dollar bond market on Friday after a long absence, to raise its largest Kauri bond since 2008.
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CPPIB Capital rounded off its sterling curve on Friday after only making its debut in the currency in January. The Canadian borrower aims to maintain a regular presence in this market as a result of its long-term investments in the UK.
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This week's scorecard looks at the progress Nordic agencies have made in their 2020 funding programmes in June.
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The green bond market lets investors scrutinise the way issuers use their money, promoting good behaviour. Now, the focus is turning to the middle men: the banks. It is a welcome iteration, given their importance in financing either a green or brown future, but we must push them further.
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The dollar bond market for sovereigns, supranationals and agencies was subdued this week, at least in comparison to the ebullient euro market. A gloomy outlook from the US Federal Open Markets Committee has unsettled investors and the SSA market is not expecting any deals.
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The International Finance Corporation (IFC) has launched the first systematic process by an issuer to formally integrate environmental, social and governance (ESG) considerations into choosing its bookrunners. Senior funding officials and sustainability bankers have welcomed the initiative as an important evolution in the use of ESG in capital markets, write Burhan Khadbai and Jon Hay.