The Covered Bond Report

News, analysis, data

Bank LCR bid cited in tight level for OP

OP Mortgage Bank was rewarded with a tight level for a Eu1bn five year covered bond yesterday (Wednesday) and an official at the Finnish issuer cited the strong bank bid for the asset class in light of expected favourable LCR treatment as key to the result.

Leads Crédit Agricole, Deutsche Bank, Pohjola, SG and UBS priced the Finnish benchmark at 5bp over mid-swaps, which is the equal tightest level for a five year non-German euro benchmark covered bond since the onset of the financial crisis, with only Sweden’s Stadshypotek otherwise having achieved such tight pricing.

OP-Pohjola APPThe leads had gone out with initial price thoughts of the high single-digits and after having generated Eu1bn of orders in half an hour they revised guidance to the mid-swaps plus 7bp area and fixed the size as a Eu1bn no-grow. The spread was fixed at 5bp over after demand topped Eu1.5bn.

OP approached the market after having had its group ratings affirmed by Standard & Poor’s last week, according to Lauri Iloniemi, head of group funding at OP-Pohjola. He said that although he was aware that other deals were due this week, there was little in the way of direct competition.

Iloniemi said that while the ECB meeting today was a part of the equation regarding the choice of timing, it was not a major factor.

“I saw that market conditions were very good and if they are very good before the meeting then why wait and see what they are like after?” he added. “I saw no upside from the ECB meeting.”

OP’s last benchmark was a Eu1bn seven year on 10 March and Iloniemi said that the issuer was returning to the market because it had collateral in place and conditions looked attractive, with the impact of covered bonds looking set for favourable treatment in LCRs driving this.

“We wanted to see what type of demand this new regulation would resemble in a shorter maturity, having done a seven year last time,” he said. “It was expected that we would have a lot of participation from banks in this one and that turned out to be true: banks made up 65% of the demand.

“It used to be more so-called real money,” he added. “Of course, absolute yields are so low at the moment that it might take away some of that demand, but bank demand was very, very strong.”

Compared with banks’ 65% share, central banks and agencies were allocated 19%, asset managers 11%, insurance companies and pension funds 3%, and corporates 2%.

Additionally, Iloniemi said that the change in demand played into regional distribution.

“Germany has always been the strongest for us, at 30%-40%, but this time it was important but only at 26%, with Nordics 20% and the Benelux 15%,” he said. “So it was more evenly distributed than previous deals, and I guess that one of the reasons is the bank demand, which explains the higher share to the UK and others.”

The UK was allocated 13%, Switzerland 8%, France 7%, eastern Europe 5%, Asia 4%, and southern Europe 2%,

Iloniemi said that the strength of bank demand was also reflected in the pricing.

“I was pretty sure that we would get a rather good print and I am pretty happy with the result that we got,” he said.

According to a syndicate official at one of the leads, the spread of mid-swaps plus 5bp incorporated no new issue premium.

Iloniemi said that OP may well launch a third benchmark later this year.

“It depends,” he said. “We have a covered bond maturing at the end of the second half and it’s very possible that we may refinance it at that time.”