E-mail us: service@prospectnews.com Or call: 212 374 2800
Bank Loans - CLOs - Convertibles - Distressed Debt - Emerging Markets
Green Finance - High Yield - Investment Grade - Liability Management
Preferreds - Private Placements - Structured Products
 
Published on 7/1/2016 in the Prospect News Emerging Markets Daily.

Turkey’s Halbank issue trades up; ‘upbeat mood’ for EM; Lat-Am moves up amid low volumes

By Christine Van Dusen

Atlanta, July 1 – The new notes from Turkey’s Turkiye Halk Bankasi AS (Halkbank) traded higher on a quieter Friday as emerging markets assets remained strong ahead of the July 4 holiday in the United States.

The Halkbank issue – $500 million 5.05% notes due 2021 that priced Thursday at 99.781 to yield 5.05%, or Treasuries plus 402.5 basis points – moved to 99.90 bid, 100.15 offered on Friday, a trader said.

That meant the new notes were trading 10 bps above the existing Halkbank 4½% notes due in 2021, which were issued last year.

“One could argue that the old curve could catch a better bid but I can’t see it outperforming the bank space, to be honest,” he said. “From here the trade is just a risk-on asset in a bond with good liquidity.”

Said a London-based analyst, “The bonds now trade in the range we were expecting them to tighten into, but I admit it happened way quicker than I could have imagined.”

Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, HSBC and Unicredit were the joint global coordinators and, along with Bank ABC and Emirates NBD, the bookrunners for the Rule 144A and Regulation S deal.

Looking to Latin America, bonds pushed higher on Friday, boosted by the move in U.S. Treasuries, a New York-based trader said.

Colombia-based Ecopetrol SA was “jumping higher again,” he said. “Mexico and Chile high-grade are also seeing nice moves higher in the aggregate. Very little inquiry so far, and Street volumes are also very low, as expected, pre-holiday.”

Overall, emerging markets assets “remain in an upbeat mood,” the analyst said.


© 2015 Prospect News.
All content on this website is protected by copyright law in the U.S. and elsewhere. For the use of the person downloading only.
Redistribution and copying are prohibited by law without written permission in advance from Prospect News.
Redistribution or copying includes e-mailing, printing multiple copies or any other form of reproduction.