Westpac, ANZ eyeing Samurai bond issues-sources
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SYDNEY, Jan 8 (Reuters) - Westpac Banking Corp (WBC.AX) and Australia & New Zealand Banking Group (ANZ.AX) are planning to sell their first Samurai bonds backed by an Australian government guarantee, market sources said.
Westpac and ANZ have mandated Daiwa, Nikko Citigroup and Nomura to lead manage both offers, the sources said.
Samurai bonds are denominated in yen and sold by foreign borrowers in Japan.
Westpac, Australia's second-biggest bank, is expected to come first with an issue in January and to be followed by ANZ, the country's No. 4 bank, in February, the sources said.
Australian banks are queuing up to raise funds across the globe under a government guarantee programme which came into effect late November to help them weather the global financial crisis.
Australian banks have raised nearly US$27 billion in guaranteed bonds since December with the vast majority denominated in U.S. and Australian dollars. However, fears of a bond oversupply are encouraging borrowers to look at other currencies and countries to raise funds.
Suncorp-Metway (SUN.AX), Australia's second-biggest car and
home insurer, is eyeing a British pound bond issue with a
five-year maturity. See [ID:nSYD332019] for more.
No issuer has yet sold government-backed Samurai as the Japanese currency was initially excluded from government guarantee programmes, a banker said.
Bonds backed by the Australian Commonwealth are rated triple A by S&P and Moody's. Investors worldwide are keen buyers of this new asset class as they offer significantly higher margins than traditional government bonds, also rated triple A. (Additional reporting by Rika Otsuka) (Reporting by Cecile Lefort)
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