Amazon issues record-setting Canadian dollar-denominated corporate bond deal
BY Reuters | CORPORATE | 12:08 PM EDTBy Fergal Smith
TORONTO, June 9 (Reuters) - Amazon
The previous record size of C$8.5 billion was set by Google-parent Alphabet last month.
Global companies have flocked to Canada's maple bond market this year, drawn by strong investor appetite and cheaper borrowing costs. Maple bonds are Canadian-dollar denominated bonds issued by foreign borrowers into the Canadian market.
The five-part deal from the Seattle-based e-commerce giant includes maturities ranging from 2029 to 2056, the filing shows.
The 2029 notes were priced at a spread of 40 basis points over the Government of Canada curve, while the spread for the 2056 notes was 110 basis points over the 3.50% Government of Canada bond due?in December 2057.
Debt issues by so-called "hyperscalers" - or big tech companies - outside the United States this year are part of a push to diversify funding as the companies look to finance trillions of dollars of investment in AI infrastructure, especially data centers, in the years ahead.
In March, Amazon
($1 = 1.3949 Canadian dollars)
(Reporting by Fergal Smith; Editing by Colin Barr and Andrea Ricci )
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