Having increased the size of its new 2014 maturity Kangaroo bond to A$1 billion (US$800 million) on June 4, the European Investment Bank (EIB) (AAA/Aaa/AAA) says it is looking at a minimum term of five years for Kangaroo issuance but that demand is only starting to fall into place for longer-dated securities.
Commonwealth Bank of Australia (CommBank) (AA/Aa1/AA) priced a total of US$2 billion of three-year fixed and floating rate bonds on June 3 under the Australian government guarantee, with the issuer saying strong demand for guaranteed product among offshore investors continues to make it a more attractive source of funds than unguaranteed deals.
A new 2014 maturity priced by Council of Europe Development Bank (CEB) (AAA/Aaa/AAA) on June 3 reopened the Kauri market for 2009, becoming the first deal in the market since November last year. The NZ$150 million (US$97.95 million) 2014 bond priced at 31.5 basis points over government bonds, which rate sheet data suggests equates to mid-50s basis points over swap.
On June 2 Westpac Banking Corporation (Westpac) (AA/Aa1/AA-) topped up its July 2012 fixed and floating rate non-guaranteed bonds to bring the total on issue in this maturity to A$2 billion (US$1.6 billion). The A$50 million of fixed rate and A$250 million of floating rate bonds priced at 120 basis points over the bank bill swap rate (BBSW) and swap.
The Australian Office of Financial Management will make two further rounds of investments into residential mortgage-backed securities (RMBS) as it approaches the completion of its total A$8 billion (US$6.48 billion) allocation, having announced the penultimate pair of trades it will support as part of its current RFP on June 2.
On May 28 over 250 parties with an interest in the Australian corporate bond market met in Sydney in an event hosted by ANZ Banking Group (ANZ), Commonwealth Bank of Australia (CommBank), National Australia Bank (NAB) and Westpac Institutional Bank (Westpac), to discuss the means by which a revival in local corporate issuance can be stimulated.
On May 29 KfW Bankengruppe (KfW) (AAA/Aaa/AAA) priced its third Kangaroo transaction in just over a month, bringing a new five-year bond with pricing of 75 basis points over mid-swap. The A$750 million (US$591.6 million) transaction is also the first new Kangaroo line from an agency issuer in 2009.
New South Wales Treasury Corporation (TCorp) (AAA/Aaa/AAA) sold A$2.55 billion (US$1.98 billion) in a new 2013 line via bookbuild on May 27, with a slight pricing premium over its existing lines helping secure oversubscriptions of just under a billion dollars.
The three-year bond offering by Downer EDi (Downer) (BBB-) through its New Zealand subsidiary Works Finance (Works) which lodged a prospectus on May 27 will offer investors a minimum coupon of 8.75 per cent – making the deal the highest-paying senior transaction in the New Zealand market this year.
Fairfax Media (BB+) has completed the buyback of its A$200 million (US$157 million) fixed rate June 2011 bonds that it opened on May 21. Dale Bridle, group treasurer, says the company bought back A$32.3 million of the bonds at 84 cents in the dollar.
Westpac Banking Corporation (Westpac) (AA/Aa1) priced its first unguaranteed benchmark transaction of 2009 on May 26, selling A$1.7 billion (US$1.32 billion) of fixed and floating rate three-year paper at 120 basis points over swap in a deal which the bank hopes will presage a return to predominantly unguaranteed issuance in the 2009/10 financial year.
After a relatively slow period for issuance in offshore currencies, Australasian banks have conducted some activity in sterling and yen in recent weeks with National Australia Bank (NAB) (AA/Aa1), Commonwealth Bank of Australia (CommBank) (AA/Aa1) and Macquarie Bank (Macquarie) (A-/A2) securing the equivalent of over A$1 billion (US$775.5 million) each – the former in two deals, one of them public and unguaranteed.