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U.S. bond markets see record supply of bank paper in Jan: BMO
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U.S. bond markets see record supply of bank paper in Jan: BMO
Jan 23, 2025 7:22 AM

By Shankar Ramakrishnan

Jan 23 (Reuters) - U.S. and non-U.S. banks have raised

$90 billion selling investment-grade rated bonds so far in

January, making it already the busiest ever month for bank debt

issuance, a BMO Capital report said.

This month's flood of bond issuance is partly due to

seasonal factors but also stems from tight credit spreads - the

premium companies pay over Treasuries - and strong demand from

investors to lock in higher yields.

Bank bonds have become popular on expectations that the new

Trump administration could ease regulatory capital rules and

help their fee business with more merger approvals.

So far this month nearly $159 billion has been raised by

investment-grade issuers and that, said BMO, is on track to meet

or even exceed the month-end tally estimates of $175 billion.

"Banks always make up a predominant proportion of January

supply, but bank issuance in 2025 has been extreme even by lofty

historical standards," said Dan Krieter, credit strategist at

BMO Capital.

The big six American banks set the stage by raising a

combined $45.15 billion, which was a record for January, said

Krieter. Now U.S. regional banks were likely to help the pace of

supply, with PNC Financial Services ( PNC ) raising $2.75 billion on

Wednesday.

"Reception to yesterday's (Wednesday) PNC was very strong,

with the deal coming almost 5x oversubscribed, showing demand

should remain strong for any additional regional banks that come

to market," he said.

Despite the huge supply, bank spreads also outperformed,

evidenced by a 4 basis points tightening in the banking index

compared to the broad IG index which is 1 bp narrower on the

month, he added.

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