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 6/26/2020 in the Prospect News Investment Grade Daily.

Lighter pre-holiday high-grade supply eyed; Takeda markets deal; flows rebound; bonds mixed

By Cristal Cody

Tupelo, Miss., June 26 – Investment-grade market action quieted on Friday, capping off a week of about $23 billion of new issuance.

Deal volume is expected to thin to about $10 billion to $15 billion over the upcoming short market week ahead of the Independence Day holiday break, sources report.

In July, syndicate sources expect about $100 billion of issuance for the month as volume begins to normalize following heavy issuance over the past four months.

Takeda Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd. (Baa2/BBB+/) continued marketing on Friday for four tranches of registered dollar-denominated senior notes and euro-denominated bonds, a source said. Marketing began Thursday for the dollar-denominated 10-, 20-, 30- and 40-year tranches with pricing anticipated in the week ahead.

Equitable Holdings, Inc. subsidiary Equitable Financial Life Insurance Co. (A2/A+) also remains in the deal pipeline after the company held fixed income investor calls on Wednesday for an inaugural offering of notes.

Elsewhere, investment-grade bond fund and ETF inflows posted the second highest total on record for the past week ended Wednesday, according to a BofA Securities, Inc. research note released on Friday.

Flows rebounded to $12.83 billion from $5.98 billion a week earlier.

“The improvement in IG inflows was broad-based,” the analysts said.

ETF inflows rose to $6.6 billion from $3.8 billion in the previous week, and fund inflows climbed to $6.23 billion from $2.81 billion a week earlier.

Short-term inflows increased to $5.28 billion this past week from $1.58 billion, while excluding short-term inflows rose to $7.56 billion from $4.4 billion in the previous week.

Investment-grade credit spreads eased about 3 basis points on Friday. The Markit CDX North American Investment Grade 33 index headed out at a spread of 80.99 bps.

In the secondary market, new issues priced this week were improving, sources note.

Intuit Inc.’s $2 billion four-part offering of fixed-rate notes (A3/A-/) priced Thursday with an overall final book demand of more than $10 billion and 40 bps tighter than initial talk firmed about 4 bps to 5 bps.

The company’s tranche of 1.65% notes due July 15, 2030 traded at 96 bps bid.

Intuit sold $500 million of the 10-year notes at a spread of 100 bps over Treasuries.

Initial talk was at the 140 bps spread area.

Xylem Inc.’s $1 billion two-part offering of green senior notes (Baa2/BBB/BBB) traded about 5 bps to 7 bps better better than issuance.

The company sold $500 million of 1.95% notes due Jan. 30, 2028 on Wednesday at a spread of 150 bps over Treasuries. Initial talk was in the Treasuries plus 175 bps area.

Xylem priced $500 million of 2.25% notes due Jan. 30, 2031 at Treasuries plus 165 bps, compared to initial guidance at the 190 bps over Treasuries area.

Pacific Gas and Electric Co.’s first mortgage bonds (Baa3/BBB-/BBB-) priced as part of an $8,925,000,000 six-tranche offering on June 16 were mixed in the secondary market, a source said.

Pacific Gas’ $1 billion tranche of 2.1% bonds due Aug. 1, 2027 were seen with a 98 handle over Friday’s session.

The notes priced at 99.81 to yield 2.13%, or a spread of Treasuries plus 155 bps.


© 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.