Following its first Australian dollar deal in seven years, Adelaide Airport says re-engaging with the local investor base was a top priority as it embarks on a new capex plan and plans for upcoming maturities. While issuance has slowed since a hectic end to Q1, the deal book demonstrates ongoing robust demand for Australian dollar corporate credit.
Allied Credit’s latest asset-backed securities transaction more than doubles the size of its largest previous deal. The issuer says the deal is effectively the first of a new programme given it now carries two credit ratings and is European Securities and Markets Authority reporting compliant, factors that helped provide comfort to some offshore accounts that had previously not been able to participate.
Prospa’s ability to lengthen the lifespan of its loan originations allowed the issuer to adopt a more traditional closed-pool deal structure in its return to the securitisation market. Offering shorter weighted average life securities was positively received by domestic investors, the issuer reveals – but it adds that there is more work to be done to educate offshore accounts about Australian SME credit.
Prospa’s ability to lengthen the lifespan of its loan originations allowed the issuer to adopt a more traditional closed-pool deal structure in its return to the securitisation market. Offering shorter weighted average life securities was positively received by domestic investors, the issuer reveals – but it adds that there is more work to be done to educate offshore accounts about Australian SME credit.
The Australian Securitisation Forum’s 2023 annual conference attracted a record number of delegates – well over a thousand attended – and offered its most wide-ranging agenda ever. The securitisation industry has navigated higher rates and increasing global uncertainty well to date, with record volume printing in 2023 and a notable uptick in collateral diversity. The road ahead may be tricky but the market is facing it with confidence.
In February, KangaNews and Mizuho Securities hosted their Japanese investor roundtable discussion in Tokyo for the first time since the pandemic. Much has changed and there are prospects of further fundamental shifts on the horizon – including policy normalisation – but these investors remain a core component of the Australian dollar fixed-income market.
In pursuit of maintaining its domestic bond curve, Aurizon Network returned to the Australian dollar market for the first time in four years. The issuer reveals that the deal enjoyed abundant demand – which it ascribes to emerging understanding of nuance in sustainability as well as the ongoing positive backdrop for credit supply.
Deal sources say Nestlé’s jumbo debut Kangaroo transaction is a further show of confidence for the Australian dollar market. They hope it could spur other international corporate names to consider Australian dollar funding after a three-year drought since the last Kangaroo corporate issuance of similar size.
In February, KangaNews and Mizuho Securities hosted their Japanese investor roundtable discussion in Tokyo for the first time since the pandemic. Much has changed and there are prospects of further fundamental shifts on the horizon – including policy normalisation – but these investors remain a core component of the Australian dollar fixed-income market.
The Asian bid has been a major talking point in the Australian credit market in early 2024 and, while technical factors have provided a strong tailwind, market participants believe the outlook is positive for the medium term at least. Finding ongoing sources of bank and corporate supply may be a bigger concern.
The emergence of private credit as an asset class in Australia began in the ultra-low rates environment ahead of and during the pandemic, but has only grown as overall interest in fixed income has grown in more recent times. The domestic market is still maturing and the focus of global interest is typically the US, but there are also private credit opportunities in Europe.