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Temasek selling 700 million pounds of sterling bonds

temasekholdings Temasek selling 700 million pounds of sterling bondsAccording to Reuters, “Singapore state investor Temasek Holdings is selling 700 million pounds ($1.1 billion) worth of bonds to diversify its funding sources as it makes its foray into the sterling-denominated debt market.

Temasek will issue 200 million pounds of 12-year debt at 97 to 100 basis points above gilts and 500 million pounds of 30 year at 92 to 95 basis points above gilts, according to a term sheet seen by Reuters.

“Neither size will change,” according to the term sheet that was distributed to potential investors.

The Temasek bonds, rated AAA by both Moody’s and Standard & Poor’s, will be priced before the end of London trading, said a source briefed on the issue.

Sources with knowledge of the deal said the Temasek fundraising was not linked to any investment in BP Plc or another British firm.”"

Read more: Reuters

Orders Top $1B For Bahrain Mumtalakat Bond Debut

mumtalakatholdings Orders Top $1B For Bahrain Mumtalakat Bond Debut

According to the Wall Street Journal, “Offers for Bahrain Mumtalakat Holding Co.’s first-ever bond issue are in the range of $1 billion to $1.25 billion, according to a source familiar with the sale.

That means the sovereign wealth entity’s debut could be larger than the minimum $500 million benchmark size when it completes on Wednesday. Deutsche Bank, HSBC, JPMorgan and Standard Chartered are leading the sale.

The five-year senior unsecured bonds, rated A by Standard & Poor’s and A from Fitch Ratings, are expected to yield 300 basis points over mid-swaps. Proceeds will be used for general corporate purposes, including to refinance existing debt.

The Kingdom of Bahrain, which owns Mumtalakat outright, issued $1.25 billion in 5.5% bonds on March 24 via JPMorgan, Deutsche Bank and BNP Paribas, according to Dealogic.  In a note on June 21, Standard & Poor’s said there is an “almost certain likelihood that the government of Bahrain would provide timely and sufficient extraordinary support to Mumtalakat in the event of financial distress,” although it does not formally guarantee its liabilities.

Mumtalakat does not make material investment decisions without government consent, S&P added. Most of the company’s assets are in domestic real-estate, telecommunications, aviation, banking and manufacturing. Bahrain owns a separate holding company for oil and gas assets, the National Oil and Gas Authority.  The issuer’s decision to tap the capital markets for the first time was predicated on the Mumtalakat’s need to become more independent from Bahrain, said the source.

“In the wake of the Dubai World issues, Bahrain is trying to push these sovereign entities away from its balance sheet and would like them to fund themselves on their own,” the person said.”

Source: Wall Street Journal