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BLOG — Mar 24, 2023
By Brian Lawson
Supply was interrupted but limited issuance restarted within days
The regulatory intervention of Silicon Valley Bank stopped corporate and financial sector issuance altogether for four working days. However, the market reopened on March 17 with a sub-investment grade deal, when Norway's PGS AGA sold a USD450 million USD450 million senior secured junk bond. Pricing was set at a 13.5% coupon, with a 98% issue price. PGS is an Oslo-listed (and based) marine geophysical company primarily providing seismic and reservoir services to the oil and gas sector.
Despite remaining volatile bond market conditions have improved more this week, following Credit Suisse being taken over last weekend by UBS under an emergency ordinance, and with US authorities providing further guidance designed to ease fears of loss among corporate and larger high net worth depositors with regional banks. The most notable sign of market resilience was a highly successful USD1.8 billion 10 and 31-year sale by Republic of Panama. It sold USD1 billion of 2054 bonds priced at 6.853%, and a USD800 million tap of its 2035 bond at 6.161%, gaining USD9.5 billion in demand from over 260 accounts.
This week's supply has been limited, also including two domestic US utility issues on March 20, a EUR500 million five-year sale by the German region of Saxony, while MetLife also placed USD1 billion of ten-year bonds with a 5.125% coupon on March 21. In addition, Turkey started "non-deal" discussions with investors this week to revive its plans for ESG issuance. Market commentary suggests that this could lead to a sizeable social bond to assist reconstruction efforts following the country's severe recent earthquake.
Our take: Market impacts
While primary market activity has been limited, also reflecting this week's FOMC meeting, secondary markets offer clearer indicators, summarized below.
While the failure of three US banks and Credit Suisse's forced takeover by UBS represent a major event of financial stress, our assessment is that current events involve dislocation on a clearly smaller scale than in 2008/9. At present, bond market pricing has most affected sub-investment grade instruments, and particularly hurt weaker sub-Saharan African debt. The degree of damage for bank funding is unclear, in the absence of primary supply, but is likely to focus more on junior debt - particularly AT1 - and smaller and weaker credits.
This article was published by S&P Global Market Intelligence and not by S&P Global Ratings, which is a separately managed division of S&P Global.