TD Securities
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Lloyds Banking Group has returned to the Aussie dollar market for the first time since May 2018, offering investors the chance to invest in two tranches of senior debt at the operating company level. The issuer follows a wave of European and UK financial institutions making their way down under.
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The World Bank has printed the longest ever bond with a coupon linked to the Secured Overnight Financing Rate (Sofr), with the market finally seeming to find a consensus on how to work out the coupon for the dollar Libor replacement benchmark.
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Sterling is set to play a bigger part in the socially responsible bond market as a result of incoming reforms that are putting the pressure on UK pension funds to focus on environmental, social or governance (ESG) factors in their investments, writes Burhan Khadbai.
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One of the smallest supranational issuers has returned to the public markets for the first time since 2017 to make its Norwegian krone debut.
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As core markets in the northern hemisphere begin to cool, SSA issuers are looking towards an Australian dollar sector unaffected by the summer close.
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Investors brushed off the coronation of a new pro-Brexit prime minister in the UK on Tuesday to pile into a KfW trade and set a new size record for the sterling SSA green bond market.
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KfW picked banks on Monday for its first green bond in sterling since July 2015, as it increases the volume of its green bonds under its new framework.
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As core markets in the northern hemisphere begin to cool, SSA issuers are looking towards a Kiwi and Aussie periphery unaffected by the summer close.
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A trio of supranational and agency names headed out into niche currencies this week, as other SSA names say non-core currencies will be their focus for the rest of the year.
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World Bank hit the Canadian dollar market on Wednesday to begin its 2019/20 benchmark funding programme. It followed the European Investment Bank and KfW which have also been active in non-core currencies this week.