Alliance Global bonds up on debut

14 Aug, 2010

Bonds from Philippine conglomerate Alliance Global Group Inc rose on their Asian debut on Friday, underpinned by heavy demand from investors searching for higher returns and a firmer, broader market. The overall market rebounded and spreads narrowed after jumping to their highest in more than three weeks in the previous session, as a string of recent weak US economic data deterred investors from buying riskier assets.
Sri Lanka picks banks for $1 billion bond sale plan The Asia ex-Japan iTraxx investment-grade index narrowed 2 basis points (bps) to from Thursday's close to 123, traders said. The index has narrowed from this year's high of 172.17 bps reached in late May, but it has widened 8 bps so far this week, its first weekly jump since July 2, on growing concerns that the US recovery is stalling.
The investment-grade Markit iTraxx Europe index narrowed to 112.6 bps from 114.5 bps late on Thursday in London. Asian stocks edged up, with the MSCI Asia Pacific ex-Japan index up 0.8 percent as of 0351 GMT. Asian spreads may end the year tighter than current levels, as ultra-low interest rates in developed markets and a far more upbeat economic outlook for the region will drive investors into its high-yielding debt, traders said.
One of the session's most actively traded credits was AGI's newly-issued debt, which traded as high as 102.50 cents on the dollar before easing to 101.50, still well up from its issue price of 99.309, traders said. AGI sold $500 million of 7-year bonds on Thursday at 6.5 percent, lower than its target of between 6.625 percent to 6.75 percent.
The issue size was raised from a planned $400 million due to strong demand from investors, a source said. The deal attracted more than $3.7 billion in orders. AGI is engaged in food and property and owns Megaworld Corp, one of the biggest local developers. On Thursday, Megaworld reported that its first-half profit rose 12 percent from a year ago.
The bond also offered a yield pickup of up to 200 bps against comparable Philippine sovereign dollar debt, a Manila-based trader said, making it more attractive to investors. Investors from Asia took 89 percent of total sales, Europe 7 percent and offshore US accounts 4 percent. AGI is the third corporate issuer from the Philippines this year after International Container Terminal Services Inc and Rizal Commercial Banking Corp.
The market is now eyeing Sri Lanka's planned $1 billion sovereign bond sale, after the central bank on Thursday mandated three banks to manage the sale. Sri Lanka's bond due in 2014 was up half a point to 109 cents on the dollar, traders said. On the sovereign sector, the iTraxx SovX Asia Pacific index, which tracks the 5-year sovereign credit default swaps (CDS) of 10 countries in the region, narrowed 3 bps.

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