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UK

  • UK media company WPP sold a dual tranche bond this week, following its own recent trend for issuing shorter tenors with its most recent euro issues.
  • FIG
    The preference share market is in disarray after Aviva asserted that it could cancel its instruments at par, a decision that has been derided by fixed income investors of all stripes and is now being examined by UK market regulators. Tyler Davies reports.
  • The day after a jumbo corporate bond issue is often a quiet one for new issuance as investors digest their allocations and assess the impact on secondary spreads. But after Sanofi's €8bn offering on Wednesday, Thursday was another bumper day.
  • Lloyds issued its first euro covered bond in almost two years on Thursday, helping to assuage Brexit concerns by pricing the €1bn seven year with a positive spread to mid-swaps.
  • A top US derivatives regulator on Wednesday went into battle against his European counterparts over their new proposal that will increase the stringency of the EU’s oversight of foreign clearing houses.
  • Tullow Oil, the group based in London that has most of its operations in Africa, was on course to print its new high yield bond in the 7% area this week. It was attracting interest from pension funds in need of assets with high returns, according to sources.
  • The UK Debt Management Office (DMO) is forecasting £102.9bn ($143.4bn) of Gilt issuance in 2018/19, a fall of £12.2bn from this financial year, which ends on March 31. But the share of funding to be syndicated is steady — despite some investors over the last few months calling for a reduction in the volume of syndications.
  • After a reasonable wait, investors are starting to see the more frequent investment grade corporate bond issuers return to the market. On Tuesday, French materials company Saint-Gobain and French telecoms operator Orange sold benchmark deals and UK media company WPP sold a dual-tranche issue.
  • The European Commission has warned the UK that special tax rules for commodity derivatives in the country might be in violation of European Union treaties.
  • JP Morgan has hired Paul Wheeler to join its oil and gas ECM business in EMEA.
  • Second tier English football club Norwich City has announced plans to sell a mini-bond to build a new academy to help it develop the club’s younger players. The retail bond features an unusual kicker based on the club’s success and will use a platform co-founded by former Chelsea player and manager Gianluca Vialli.
  • China Resources Land tapped the Panda bond market for the first time since July 2017, raising Rmb6bn ($945.6m). But few onshore investors who bought the three year bond looked at the trade as a real Panda, according to bankers on the deal.