Middle East
-
Fund flows into emerging market bond funds hit a 76 week high in the week ending January 12, according to EPFR data, culminating a week of strong primary markets that a wobble in US Treasuries could do nothing to derail.
-
-
Several big name investors this week called the start of a bond bear market after a back-up in 10 year US Treasury yields but there was little sign of reticence from the emerging markets buy-side, with three sovereigns pulling in jumbo order books.
-
Strong demand enabled Oman to secure a larger than expected $6.5bn of funding on Wednesday, taking it a considerable way towards covering its Omr3bn ($7.8bn) deficit for 2018.
-
Investors piled in excess of $12.5bn orders into a dual tranche dollar trade for Israel on Wednesday, the largest level of oversubscription the sovereign has ever experienced.
-
Abu Dhabi National Oil Co (Adnoc) is due to sign a $3bn loan with four lenders — three of which are Japanese — next week, after borrowing $6bn from the international market in November last year.
-
The Republic of Turkey sold a $2bn 10 year bond on Tuesday just as a sell-off in US Treasuries took hold, but it still managed to raise a book of $5.3bn for the deal.
-
Though bankers may have expected the first quarter of 2018 to play out with a glory run of slam dunk deals, a recent back-up in US Treasury yields has left some big name investors calling the start of a bear market in bonds.
-
The State of Israel opened books on Wednesday for a dual tranche dollar note that will extend its curve by an extra five years.
-
Turkiye Sinai Kalkinma Bankasi batted away suggestions on Tuesday that its deal would suffer from pricing on the same day as the Turkish sovereign, printing a $350m five year bond from a book of $1.15bn and 15bp inside initial price guidance.
-
Oman has hit the screens with a copycat trade of its 2017 triple tranche $5bn note, navigating a more volatile market than it may have hoped for after a back-up in US Treasuries on Tuesday.