Top section
Top section
Sovereign's trade will form a yardstick for concessions investment grade CEEMEA borrowers may need to offer
Debut took a long time but established market access, says country's debt chief
Data
More articles
More articles
More articles
-
Some of us have got quite comfortable working from home — a bit too comfortable.
-
China’s onshore bond market has been hit with a number of high-profile defaults from state-owned issuers, undermining primary supply and leading to a spike in secondary yields. Addison Gong reports.
-
Philippine company AC Energy found good support for a $300m fixed-for-life green perpetual bond on Wednesday, with demand from existing and new investors, as well as domestic fund managers.
-
The People’s Republic of China returned to the European market on Wednesday, part of its plan to make euro bond outings an annual exercise. The €4bn transaction was a blow-out, with the order book well oversubscribed — and one of the three tranches achieving the sovereign’s first negative yield. Morgan Davis reports.
-
China Gezhouba Group Co raised $200m from a subordinated perpetual bond on Wednesday.
-
Mexican power generator FEL Energy, which sells 70% of its capacity to state-owned electric utility CFE, priced a debut bond deal on Wednesday as investors were unshaken by noise surrounding a different Mexican credit with a long-term agreement with a government-owned entity.
Sub-sections
-
Sponsored by CAF – Development Bank of Latin America and the Caribbean
CAF gearing up to transform regional development
-
Sponsored by Emirates NBD Capital
Emirates NBD Capital: An unrivalled conduit for Middle East liquidity
-
-
Sponsored by European Investment Bank
European Investment Bank: Supporting sustainable development in North Africa