Regina Leader-Post

Bond issuance balloons as BoC clarifies rate path

- MACIEJ ONOSZKO

Investors devoured $1.85 billion of new bonds at the tightest spreads in years after the Bank of Canada made clear it wasn’t in a rush to hike interest rates aggressive­ly. The busiest day in Canadian dollar bond issuance in almost two months bodes well for future supply.

Toyota Credit Canada Inc. was the first out of the gates early on Thursday, followed by H&R Real Estate Investment Trust and U.K.based Lloyds Banking Group Plc, which returned to the maple bond market after a six-year hiatus. Quebec also made its first foray into the bond market in six weeks.

The sales surge brought an end to a quiet start of the year as borrowers may have been waiting for policy clarity from the Bank of Canada, according to Jason Parker, head of fixed-income research at BMO Capital Markets. “These are good times for the issuers and tougher times for portfolio managers, but some of them are seeing a bit of a relief from an all-in perspectiv­e, because even as spreads are lower, Canada government bond yields are higher, and that’s why they’re willing to continue to play in spread product,” he said.

Toyota priced $600 million of bonds divided between two-anda-half-year floating-rate notes and five-year fixed-rate securities. It sold the five-year bonds paying as little as 68 basis points over the Government of Canada yield curve, making it the lowest spread for a five-year Canadian corporate bond in years.

Both H&R REIT and Lloyds increased the size of their transactio­ns from initial targets, with the Toronto-based trust eventually pricing $250 million of five-year notes and the U.K. bank as much as $500 million of seven-year securities. Quebec sold $500 million of September 2027 debt at a spread of 54 basis points over similar-maturity Canada bonds, the tightest the province has sold the bond at.

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