KfW
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This week's scorecard features updates on the funding progress of selected European agencies.
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The green bond market has enjoyed one of the most remarkable weeks in its short life, with a series of deals that bankers say could help change the future of the market — and that all were priced roughly close to their issuers’ conventional curve.
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Issuers could find several arbitrage opportunities in sterling this week, as favourable basis swap rates make swapping the currency into euros or dollars attractive and investors return to the currency following the No vote in last week’s Scotland independence referendum. KfW has mandated banks for a short dated sterling tap, while World Bank and NRW.Bank reopened sterling deals on Monday afternoon.
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Read on to see how selected benchmarks are faring in secondary. Trading levels given are bid-side spreads versus mid-swaps and/or an underlying benchmark as of Thursday's close. The source for secondary trading levels is Interactive Data.
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KfW and Kommunalbanken sold Kangaroos on Thursday, despite Australian dollar investors nearing capacity on agency paper, according to bankers in the market.
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Read on to see how selected benchmarks are faring in secondary. Trading levels given are bid-side spreads versus mid-swaps and/or an underlying benchmark as of Thursday's close. The source for secondary trading levels is Interactive Data.
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Read on to see how selected benchmarks are faring in secondary. Trading levels given are bid-side spreads versus mid-swaps and/or an underlying benchmark as of Thursday's close. The source for secondary trading levels is Interactive Data.
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KfW and the Inter-American Development Bank highlighted demand at the far end of the Kangaroo curve on Tuesday. IADB was able to price a tap of 10 year notes during the Australian day, while the German development bank has drawn strong early orders for a new long 10 year of its own.
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Read on to see how selected benchmarks are faring in secondary. Trading levels given are bid-side spreads versus mid-swaps and/or an underlying benchmark as of Thursday's close. The source for secondary trading levels is Interactive Data.
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Public sector issuers shrugged off the quiet dollar and euro markets to take advantage of other currency opportunities this week — and there are signs that more deals could follow in the summer.
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A short dated euro or a long dated dollar benchmark could be the next move for KfW, which visited the market this week with a NZ$100m ($85.1m) August 2020 Eurobond.
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Greece's €1.5bn July 2017 from four weeks ago suffered a near 50bp widening versus Germany over the past week, as investors stormed into the eurozone core. But most safe haven assets like the World Bank's $1.75bn December 2016 from last week tightened against swaps and benchmarks.