IFR Magazine – January 20, 2018

(Grace) #1
BONDS COVERED BONDS

back into Australian dollars about 230bp
wide of BBSW, though the US market
obviously has huge depth advantages, as
evidenced by CBA’s US$3.8bn order book.
TD Securities and the issuer’s own
syndication team were joint lead managers
on the trade, with expected ratings of Baa1/
BBB (Moody’s/S&P).


RABOBANK MATCHES MAJOR MARGIN

RABOBANK, Australia branch, (Aa2/A+/AA–)
RAISEDû!MûFROMûLASTû&RIDAYSûlVE
YEARû
senior unsecured note offering, with CBA,
NAB and UBS as joint lead managers.
!ûTRANCHEûOFû!MûOFûmOATING
RATEûNOTESû
was priced inside 82bp area guidance at
three-month BBSW plus 77bp, matching the
MARGINûFORûTHEû!BNûlVE
YEARû&2.û
offering that similarly rated Aussie major
bank ANZ (Aa3/AA–/AA–) issued on January 9.
The Rabobank A$150m 3.25% January 25
2023s were priced at 99.748 for a yield of
3.305%, some 77bp wide of asset swaps and
80.2bp over the April 2023 ACGB.


BEN BANK RAISES A$500m

BENDIGO & ADELAIDE BANK (A3/BBB+/A–) raised
A$500m from last Tuesday’s dual-tranche
lVE
YEARûSENIORûUNSECUREDûBONDûOFFERINGûVIAû
joint lead managers ANZ, CBA, NAB and
Westpac.
!ûTRANCHEûOFû!MûOFûmOATING
RATEû
notes was priced inside 110bp area guidance
at three-month BBSW plus 105bp, while
A$150m of 3.50% January 25 2023 were
priced at 99.966 for a yield of 3.5075%,
105bp wide of asset swaps.
4HEûlRSTûNON
MAJORûBANKûISSUANCEûOFûû
came 28bp wide of the 77bp margin that
ANZ (Aa3/AA–/AA–) paid for its A$1.8bn
lXED
RATEûBONDûANDûmOATING
RATEûlVE
YEARû
note offering a week earlier.

RBC SYDNEY BACK FOR MORE

ROYAL BANK OF CANADA, acting through its
Sydney branch, rated Aa3/AA–
(Moody’s/S&P), priced a US$300m one-year
mOATING
RATEûNOTEûOFFERINGûLASTû-ONDAYûATû

three-month BBSW plus 30bp, in line with
guidance.
RBC Capital Markets was sole lead manager
on the offering.
On November 23, Royal Bank of Canada,
Sydney, sold A$275m of self-led one-year
mOATERS ûALSOûPRICEDûBPûWIDEûOFûTHREE
month BBSW.

ASB SELLS THREE-YEAR BENCHMARK

ASB BANK (A1/AA–/AA–) sold NZ$500m
53M ûOFûTHREE
YEARûmOATING
RATEûNOTESû
last Tuesday, priced at the tight end of three-
month BKBM plus 70bp–73bp guidance. CBA
was sole lead manager.
Pricing was 3bp tighter than the 70bp
margin paid on the last three-year trade for
one of New Zealand’s identically rated major
lenders, ANZ Bank New Zealand’s NZ$375m
print on December 15.

CS READIES AUSSIE TLAC,
CBA STAYS AT HOME

CREDIT SUISSE GROUP (Baa2/BBB+/A–) has
mandated CBA, NAB and its own syndication
team for investor meetings in Australia and
Asia, starting on January 29, for a potential
TLAC-eligible Australian dollar issue.
Last October, Credit Suisse Group raised
¥57bn (US$506m) from triple-tranche senior
callable bonds for TLAC purposes, becoming
THEûlRSTûFOREIGNûBANKûTOûISSUEûYENûCALLABLEû
TLAC-eligible paper.
COMMONWEALTH BANK OF AUSTRALIA (Aa3/AA–/
AA–) plans to price a self-led Australian
dollar 5.25-year benchmark senior
unsecured bond offering in the week
beginning January 22.

COVERED BONDS


EUROS


INVESTORS PICK AND CHOOSE IN TIGHT
COVERED BOND MARKET

DNB Boligkreditt and Canadian Imperial
Bank of Commerce (CIBC) drew riotous
RESPONSESûFORûTHEIRûlVE
YEARûCOVEREDûBONDSû
last week, in contrast to ECB-eligible names
where demand continues to be much more
measured.
DNB BOLIGKREDITTSûõBNûlVE
YEAR ûTHEû
lRSTû3CANDINAVIANûEUROûCOVEREDûOFûTHEûYEAR û
drew over €2.2bn of orders, pricing at 10bp
through swaps. CIBC’s €1.25bn note lured
€1.6bn-plus of demand.
For CIBC, it meant pricing with one of the
smaller concessions for a large benchmark

Lloyds returns to Maples


after six years


„ FINANCIALS UK bank follows host of visitors to Canadian market

LLOYDS BANKING GROUP on Thursday successfully
priced its first Maple deal in six years, achieving
funding diversification by issuing seven-year
bonds that were priced with just a few basis
points in new-issue concession.
The issuer, rated A3/BBB+/A+ by Moody’s/S&P/
Fitch, priced February 2025s at a spread of 135bp
over the interpolated Canadian government curve,
or 138.8bp versus the sovereign’s 2.50% 2024s.
The nearest comparable was Bank of
America’s 3.407% 2025s (callable) that were bid
at 106bp.
After adding a 23bp differential between
callable and bullet bonds (Lloyds is bullet),
fair value came out at 129bp, which meant the
concession was about 6bp.
“The deal represents a continuation of our
prudent funding strategy, which remains one
of building and maintaining a diverse range of
available markets for wholesale funding,” said
Peter Green, head of public senior funding and
covered bonds at Lloyds.
“The pricing of the deal was in line with what
we could achieve in a similar duration in the US
dollar and euro markets,” he said.
Lloyds’ deal joins a growing group of overseas
issuers tapping the Canadian dollar market.
The World Bank and the European Investment
Bank earlier in the year brought the first non-

domestic public-sector issues in Canadian
dollars since 2016.
The pick-up in non-domestic names versus
domestics is part of the appeal for Canadian
investors. The two issues also offered decent
margins over government bonds, World
Bank coming at 37.4bp over and the EIB at
40.15bp.
Non-financials such as Apple, AT&T,
McDonald’s and Walt Disney have also issued
Canadian dollar bonds, which has been a
win-win situation for the issuers and for local
investors.
“The rush of issuance towards Canadian
dollars is being welcomed by local investors
who have cash to put to work but are finding
themselves undersupplied,” said one syndicate
banker.
Lloyds found decent demand for its offering
of seven-year senior unsecured notes, allowing
it to increase the size to C$500m from an initial
C$300m. The final books were around C$1bn,
according to a banker.
The bonds were also quoted around 6bp
tighter once free to trade on Thursday.
TD Securities, HSBC, CIBC and BMO were joint
leads on the trade.
Shankar Ramakrishnan
(Additional reporting by Harry Koza.)
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