Data Research


HomePublicationsData Research
Share this page
Close
Julio Suarez
AFME ESG Finance Report Q2 2023
9 Aug 2023
AFME is pleased to circulate its European ESG Finance quarterly data report for the second quarter of 2023. The aim of this report is to provide detailed data and analysis on the rapidly growing Sustainable Finance market in Europe. This Report contains up to date trends for the European Sustainable Finance market as at 30 June 2023, as well as a high-level regulatory and supervisory snapshot. Key highlights: European ESG bond and loan issuance accumulated €151bn in proceeds during Q2’23, declining 23.9% year-on-year (YoY) and 11.1% quarter-on-quarter (QoQ). Half year volumes for ESG-labelled bonds increased 17% YoY predominantly driven by the robust green bond issuance during Q1’23. Sustainable-linked bond market witnessed a sharp decline in Q2’23 at 46.5% QoQ and a 16.3% YoY decrease. No ESG securitisation issuance was recorded in Q2’23. Carbon prices: EU and UK carbon prices have diverged in the course of the year, with European Union Allowance (EuA) carbon prices standing 10% above December 2022 levels while UK carbon prices have accumulated a decline of 35% over the same period. Global ESG Funds decreased marginally during Q2’23 Funds with an ESG mandate (including Mutual Funds and ETFs) reached a value of $8.4tn as of Q2’23, representing a 25.3% increase from Q2’22 but a marginal decrease of 0.1% when compared to Q1’23. The marginal quarterly decline was accompanied by net fun outflows, which accumulated a total of $26.3bn during the second quarter of 2023. ESG price premia: spreads of corporate ESG bonds against non-sustainable benchmarks widened in the second quarter of the year from c0.2bps at the start of April to c1.8bps in late July 2023. Regulatory update: We present a selective list of upcoming European initiatives for 2023. For a more comprehensive update please see AFME and Linklaters report Sustainable Finance in Europe: Regulatory State of Play (2023 updated edition)
Julio Suarez
AFME Q2 2023 Equity Primary Markets and Trading Report
2 Aug 2023
AFME is pleased to circulate itsEquity Primary Markets and Trading Report for the second quarter of 2023 (Q2 2023).The report provides an update on the performance of the equity market in Europe in activities such as primary issuance, Mergers and Acquisitions (M&A), equity liquidity structure, and market valuations. Key findings: Equity underwriting on European exchanges for the first half of 2023 rose 28% YoY on the back of stronger secondary equity offerings. IPOs accumulated €1.3bn in deal value in Q2’23, the lowest Q2 amount since 2009. For the first-half total, IPOs declined 42% also representing the lowest H1 amount since 2009. European SPAC IPOs have visibly declined from a peak of €3.2bn in Q2’21 to no deals in Q1’23 and €0.9bn in Q2’23. Completed Mergers and Acquisitions (M&A) during H1’23 declined when measured as announced value (-45% YoY) and when measured as completed value (-46% YoY). De-SPACS represented 1.4% of the total M&A value announced during H1’23, below the proportion observed during 2021FY (5%) but the same proportion of 2022FY (1.4%). Average daily equity trading on European main markets and MTFs stood at €79.9bn in H1’23, a 14% decrease compared to H1’22. Double Volume Cap (DVC) update: The number of instruments suspended under the DVC stood at 313 in July 2023 (551 in December 2022). By geographical location, 198 of the 313 suspended instruments have EU ISINs (or 63% of the total number of suspended instruments), 7 have UK ISINs (2% of suspensions) and 104 from the rest of the world (or 35% of suspensions). European equity trading mix: According to BigXYT data, on-venue trading represented 72% of the total addressable liquidity in Q2’23. Volume traded off-venues, on systematic internalisers and pure OTC, represent the remaining 28% of the volume of the total addressable liquidity.
Julio Suarez
AFME Government Bond Data Report Q1 2023
20 Jun 2023
Report highlights include: EU Member States and the UK issued EUR 944 bn in bonds and bills throughout 1Q23, which represents an increase of 20% (QoQ) compared to 4Q22, and an increase of 19% (YoY) compared to 1Q22.The UK had the largest increase in total (bond and bill) issuance during 1Q23, with first-quarter issuance up 77% YoY compared to 1Q22, driven by a surge in Gilt issuance. There werealso increased volumes of bonds issued in Germany, France and Spain during 1Q23, while in the Netherlands and Austria there was a significant increase in treasury bill issuance. Record trading volumes in European (EU+UK) government bonds during Q1 2023, according to TraX data from MarketAxess. The traded amount in Q1 2023 was the highest average daily trading volume in European government bonds since records began in 2014, with trading volume increasing 22% (QoQ) and 6% (YoY). Outstanding amount of European ESG government bonds reached EUR 359 bn during 1Q23. Volumes were driven by tap issuance by the European Commission (EUR 6.0 bn), the UK (EUR 5.8 bn), France (EUR 3.2 bn), Germany (EUR 3.0 bn), Italy (EUR 2.4 bn), Belgium (EUR 0.9 bn), Hungary (EUR 0.05 bn) and additional green bond references issued in Ireland (EUR 3.5 bn) and Austria (1.4 bn). Austria became the first sovereign worldwide to issue green commercial paper in March 2023, after issuing the first sovereign green bill in October 2022. There was a net loss of 3 primary dealers in Europe from January 2023 to April 2023. There were 3 exits and no entries of banks to European Primary Dealer systems affecting the Bulgarian sovereign debt market and the European Commission Primary Dealer Network (EU PDN). During 1Q23 there were 2 long-term credit rating upgrades for European countries and 1 downgrade. This was followed by 1 further upgrade and 1 downgrade in 2Q23to date, bringing the 2023year-to-date total to 3 upgrades and 2 downgrades. The average bid-cover ratio (demand/amount allocated) was 2.1 in 1Q23, an increase of 3.2% (QoQ) from 4Q22 and a decrease of 5.0% from 1Q22 (YoY).
Julio Suarez
AFME Prudential Data Report Q1 2023
16 Jun 2023
This report collates information on European GSIBs’ prudential capital, leverage and liquidity ratios with updated statistics as at 31 March 2023. It also illustrates the recent performance of the debt and contingent convertibles (CoCo) markets and the funding structure for banks in Europe as at June 2023. Among the main findings of this report: European GSIBs end-point CET1 ratio increased to 14.3% in 4Q’23 from 13.9% in 4Q’22. The increase was driven by lower RWAs and solid quarterly earnings, predominantly from growth in net interest income. Buyback programs undertaken by 5 of the 11 banks only partially offset in 14bps the aggregate increase in CET1 ratio. Slowdown in AT1 issuance in Q2’23 European banks have issued a total of €10.5bn in Contingent Convertible instruments (predominantly AT1s) during the year. The issued amount was predominantly originated in Q1’23 (€9.3bn), while between April and mid-June AT1 issuance significantly decelerated to €1.2bn after a 3-month hiatus in the AT1 bond market with no issuance between 6 March and 13 June. Q2'23 stands to finalise with the lowest quarterly issued amount since 4Q’15. AT1 risk premia decreased 240bps from the peak levels observed in March 2023. However, continues 130bps above the levels prior to the late-March market turbulence episode. CMDI package The box on pages 21-28 summarises the European Commission’s proposal for the review of the Crisis Management and Deposit Insurance (CMDI) framework. The reforms are a long-standing ambition to improve the EU’s bank resolution framework and constitute a step closer towards the Banking Union. The package does not include the introduction of the widely expected European Deposit Insurance Scheme (EDIS). However, the European Commission expects the CMDI package to facilitate the road towards EDIS and completing the Banking Union. AFME continues to support the development of an effective recovery and resolution framework in Europe and the ongoing work to enhance resolvability.
Julio Suarez
AFME Q1 2023 European High Yield and Leveraged Loan Report
1 Jun 2023
The Report contains European leveraged finance market trends for the first quarter of 2023, which includes issuance and credit performance figures for the high yield and leveraged loan markets. Key highlights: European leveraged finance issuance (leveraged loans and high yield bonds) accumulated €41.8 billion in proceeds in 1Q’23, an 11.8% increase from €37.4 billion in 4Q’22 and a 30.5% decrease from €60.2 billion in 1Q’22. High yield bond issuance totalled €12.7 billion on 36 deals in 1Q'23, an 18.5% increase from €10.7 billion in 4Q’22 and a 22.7% decrease from €16.5 billion in 1Q’22. The proportion of USD-denominated issuance increased to 11.2% of all issuance in 1Q’23, up from 5.2% in 4Q’22 but down from 22.3% in 1Q’22. The leading use of proceeds for high yield bond issuance in 1Q’23 was general corporate purposes, at €7.2 billion, which was higher than €6.5 billion in 4Q’22 and than €3.6 billion in 1Q’22. Preliminary data for 2Q’23 as of end May shows that high yield bond issuance has recently increased with volumes already close to those issued in the entire first quarter (€8.3 billion in April and €3.7 billion in May), although below the monthly average observed in 2021 (€13 billion). Leveraged loan issuance, including first lien, second lien, and mezzanine financing, totaled €29.1 billion in 1Q’23, up 9.2% from €26.6 billion in 4Q’22 and down 29.4% from €41.2 billion in 1Q’22. 70.5% of deals financed in 1Q’23 were issued for refinancing and/or repayment of debt, up from 63.2% in 4Q’22, and from 41.6% in 1Q’22. Credit quality: S&P reported the trailing 12-month speculative-grade bond default rate at 3.0% in March 2023, an increase from 2.2% in December 2022. Moody’s reported the speculative-grade default rate at 2.6% in March 2023, down from 2.8% in December 2022. There were 11 bond defaults reported in the 1Q’23 by Standard and Poor’s and Moody’s. The reasons were missed principal payments (for 6 of them) and distressed exchange (for 5 of them). Fitch reported an increase in European Leveraged Loan default rates (by number of deals) to 1.6% in March 2023 from 1.3% in December 2022. According to Reorg, all the European leveraged loan deals examined in 1Q’23 were covenant-lite.
Julio Suarez
AFME Q1 2023 Equity Primary Markets and Trading Report
4 May 2023
AFME is pleased to circulate itsEquity Primary Markets and Trading Report for the first quarter of 2023 (Q1 2023). The report provides an update on the performance of the equity market in Europe in activities such as primary issuance, Mergers and Acquisitions (M&A), equity liquidity structure, and market valuations. Key findings: Equity underwriting on European exchanges rose 70% YoY in Q1’23. The increase was driven by the low base in 2022, as Q1’22 represented the lowest issued amount in over a decade. The Q1’23 issued amount stood 20% below 2Y and 5Y quarterly averages. IPOs accumulated €1bn in deal value in Q1’23 on 16 deals, a 48% YoY decline continuing a sequence of underwhelming quarters for primary offerings. Two deals represented 80% of the total quarterly issued amount. IPOs on the London Stock Exchange stood at the lowest Q1 deal value since 2009. European SPAC IPOs have visibly declined from a peak of €3.2bn in Q2’21 to no deals in Q1’23. Completed Mergers and Acquisitions (M&A) declined when measured as announced value (-60% YoY) and when measured as completed value (-47% YoY). De-SPACS represented 1% of the total M&A value announced during Q1’23, the same proportion observed in 2022FY but below that during 2021 (5%). Average daily equity trading on European main markets and MTFs stood at €83.3bn in Q1’23, a 15% decrease compared to Q1’22. Double Volume Cap (DVC) update: The number of instruments suspended under the DVC has recently declined to 308, from 551 in December 2022. By geographical location, 185 of the 308 suspended instruments have EU ISINs (or 60% of the total number of suspended instruments), 13 have UK ISINs (4% of suspensions) and 110 from the rest of the world (or 36% of suspensions). European equity trading mix: According to BigXYT data, on-venue trading represented 76% of the total addressable liquidity in Q1’23. Volume traded off-venues, on systematic internalisers and pure OTC, represent the remaining 24% of the volume of the total addressable liquidity.
Julio Suarez
AFME ESG Finance Report Q1 2023
27 Apr 2023
AFME is pleased to circulate its European ESG Finance quarterly data report for the first quarter of 2023. The aim of this report is to provide detailed data and analysis on the rapidly growing Sustainable Finance market in Europe. This Report contains up to date trends for the European Sustainable Finance market as at 31 March 2023, as well as a high-level regulatory and supervisory snapshot. Key highlights: European ESG bond and loan issuance accumulated €156bn in proceeds during Q1’23, a 10.7% quarterly increase. The increase was predominantly driven by ESG-labelled bonds which accumulated €116bn in proceeds, the second largest quarterly issued amount on records. Green bond issuance grew 69.6% year-on-year (63.9% QoQ). The increase was driven by the corporate and supranational sectors. Social bond issuance increased 8.2% YoY (23.5% QoQ). We continue to observea strong participation of the French agency CADES as it consolidates as a market leader for social bonds. Sustainable bond issuance increased 47.6% YoY (97.4% QoQ). France and Spain were the top issuer nationalities in Q1’23. Sustainable-linked bond issuance declined 40.1% from the previous year but increased 26.0% QoQ. ESG securitisation issuance accumulated €1.1bn in proceeds, an increase of 103.3% compared to the first quarter of 2022. Sustainability-linked and green-linked loans decreased 56.4% YoY and 49.7% QoQ. Carbon prices: the European Union Allowance (EuA) price per metric tonne finalised Q1'23 at €89.2/Tn, from €83.3/Tn at the end of 2022. During the first weeks of Q2’23, EuA spot prices have marginally increased to €92.8/Tn. Global ESG Funds rose marginally during Q1’23. Funds with an ESG mandate (including Mutual Funds and ETFs) totalled $7.9tn as of Q1’23 a 0.11% increase from Q4’22 but a 10.7% decrease from Q1’22. The marginal quarterly increase was driven by higher asset valuations partially offset by outflows which accumulated $27.1bn during Q1’23. ESG price premia: spreads of corporate ESG bonds against non-sustainable benchmarks have tightened in the first quarter of the year from c2.5bps at the start of the year to c0bps in April 2023. Regulatory update: We present a selective list of upcoming European initiatives for 2023. For a more comprehensive update please see AFME and Linklaters report Sustainable Finance in Europe: Regulatory State of Play (2023 updated edition)
Loading...