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Supras and agencies

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SSA
Spreads expected to remain ‘well anchored’ in coming weeks despite this week’s blip
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'
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  • SSA
    The dollar bond market is gradually opening up, with two high quality public sector borrowers hitting screens on Monday for short dated deals. But with volatility still gripping the cross-currency basis swap market, European borrowers are still sticking to their home currency.
  • The Nordic Investment Bank on Monday became the latest public sector borrower to use the capital markets to provide emergency financing in response to the coronavirus crisis. But rather than selling a conventional or socially responsible bond, the supranational has developed a new framework specially designed to tackle the pandemic.
  • SSA
    CPPIB Capital hit the euro market on Monday, becoming the first SSA borrower not eligible for QE to access the market since the coronavirus outbreak shuttered the market. A fellow Canadian is set to follow suit.
  • Investors flocked to African Development Bank’s Fight Covid-19 social bond on Thursday, allowing the supranational to print its own largest ever dollar deal, and its largest ever social bond.
  • The Inter-American Development Bank had the primary dollar public sector bond market to itself on Friday as it raised funding as part of its response to the coronavirus pandemic.
  • ‘Corona bonds’ have been talked up so much that the EU risks underwhelming the market by failing to act. It has become a question of political solidarity within the region, not simply one of debt management.