National Australia Bank (AA/Aa1/AA) (NAB) has followed its July 25 announcement of a A$830 million (US$795.14 million) writedown of its investments in US residential mortgages with a downsizing of the 2011 bond deal it priced on July 22, from A$850 million to A$260 million.
Rabobank New Zealand (AAA/Aaa) priced a 2011 domestic transaction on July 23. The Bank of New Zealand-led deal was finalised at its initial size of NZ$100 million (US$75.85 million) and sold at the bottom end of its indicative price range, 22 basis points above mid-rate swap.
NOTE: THIS DEAL WAS DOWNSIZED INBETWEEN PRICING AND SETTLEMENT. CLICK HERE TO READ ABOUT THE FINAL DEAL Institutional investors made up half the book on the July 22 increase to National Australia Bank (AA/Aa1/AA) (NAB)’s 2011 domestic fixed and floating bond. The bank sold A$850 million (US$829.69 million) of new paper at 90 basis points above swap, making the line the first Australian corporate bond of over A$3 billion.
With deal flow elsewhere reduced to a trickle, market talk has turned to T1 securities, with ANZ Banking Group (ANZ) and National Australia Bank (NAB) said to be looking to follow Suncorp Metway, Macquarie Bank and Westpac Banking Corporation (Westpac) as domestic hybrid issuers this year.
ANZ says the US$2 billion transaction it brought through its New Zealand subsidiary ANZ National (AA/Aa2/AA-) on July 11 was part of its normal annual funding requirement, playing down market speculation regarding the surprisingly wide price the issuer paid – 312.5 basis points over US Treasuries.
Australian Securitisation Forum (ASF) has developed a multi-pronged programme designed to nurse the country’s mortgage market back to health. The programme, which KangaNews understands has already been put before legislators, could have wide-reaching consequences for Australian debt markets if instituted.
A spate of sizeable EMTN trades in Aussie dollars from top-rated Kangaroo issuers over the last few months appears to have been done to fill demand from a single Japanese investor. KangaNews has information on 12 transactions from eight issuers, totalling A$4.87 billion (US$4.78 billion).
Despite the ongoing credit market upheaval, the first half of 2008 saw record domestic primary market activity in Australia, with the A$25.42 billion (US$24.62 billion) of new paper priced in the six months exceeding total issuance from 2007. There was also A$8.67 billion more domestic issuance than in the previous record first half, 2006.
Minimal deal flow over the last fortnight has slowed movement in KangaNews’s intermediary league tables to a glacial pace. With just one Kangaroo deal priced so far in July, TD Securities has closed the gap on table-topper RBC Capital Markets in that market with the two still accounting for a combined 80 per cent of volume this year.
St.George Bank (A+/Aa2/A+) (St.George) priced a A$50 million (US$47.9 million) increase to the floating tranche of its April 2011 bond on July 10 – the first time the issuer has increased the line since its 2006 debut and bringing its size to A$950 million, or A$1.35 billion including the fixed rate tranche.
The European summer has not traditionally slowed Australian dollar issuance to an enormous extent, with KangaNews data indicating July has in the past actually been one of the busiest months for Kangaroo borrowers in particular.
Up to A$11.43 billion (US$10.92 billion) of Queensland Treasury Corporation (AAA/Aaa) (QTC)’s A$16.3 billion borrowing requirement for the 2008-9 financial year will be sourced in AUD term markets, according to the state treasury’s June 25 borrowing programme announcement.