Most recent/Bond comments/Ad
Most recent/Bond comments/Ad
Most recent
Turkey's central bank increased inflation forecasts on Thursday due to rising energy prices
Deal's concession came to just a few basis points
Uzbek bank's deal is the first deal from the country in 2026
The lender started investor meetings late in April
More articles/Ad
More articles/Ad
More articles
-
While some emerging market loans bankers have noted an uptick of activity since a painfully slow January, those covering Russia are still patiently awaiting news of concrete transactions. But an imbalance between supply and demand has put international lenders in an awkward position, forcing them to rethink their strategies.
-
This Thursday was Fat Thursday, a Polish equivalent of Pancake Day, celebrated by the consumption of doughnuts. But Poland’s Ministry of Finance fed socially responsible investors a different treat this year: €2bn of green bonds.
-
Two Turkish issuers were back on screens this week as the country continues its rehabilitation in the capital markets. QNB Finansbank printed with a 10bp new issue premium, according to one lead manager, a level which he said shows how far Turkey has come since the sovereign paid up 50bp for its post-volatility return to market trade in October.
-
Koç Holding, Turkey's largest holding company, has mandated three banks for a five or seven year dollar RegS/144A benchmark. An investor has said that given recent Turkey volatility, he would want to see a much larger premium over the Turkey curve for the longer of those two options.
-
QNB Finansbank has revised initial price thoughts for its benchmark dollar 5.5 year bond, with books for the deal over $1.4bn. Both an investor and a syndicate official had said earlier in the day they expected tighter pricing.
-
Poland is in the market for its most ambitious green bonds yet. It has opened books for two tranches of euro debt, hitting the 10 and 30 year maturity buckets.