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  • There may be virtually no corporate bond market to speak off, but Hungary does have the most liquid government debt market in the region, largely due to the efficiency of its consolidated state debt management agency. The agency has already begun preparations for a smooth transition from forints to euros, not just by realigning issue maturities but also by targeting new investors. But it is Hungary's central bank that has boldly led the way towards EU transition, as Laurence Knight reports
  • Poland's domestic bond market may be the largest among EU applicant states, but it is dominated by government securities. As at the end of May 2001, the outstanding amount of debt securities totalled Z132bn (Eu34.1bn), of which non-government offerings accounted for just Z15bn. However, with local institutional investors keen for an alternative supply of issues, hesitant steps are being taken to develop a public corporate bond market. Nick Parsons reports
  • Anna Suszynska, deputy director of the public debt department at the ministry of finance, talks to Nick Parsons about the ministry's plans to build a more liquid and transparent domestic market for public debt. Her department was set up in 1993 with the main function of managing current and future government domestic debt; in 1998, it also took over the role of issuing foreign debt which had previously been the preserve of the foreign department
  • Romania has, over the last year, managed to compensate for an uncompromising domestic bond market by achieving some success in the Eurobond market over the last year.
  • The Slovak government faces a problem that every government in the region has had to overcome, or will have to - finding a way to finance the budget deficit cheaply, while still developing the domestic bond market.
  • Now is a good time to raise international awareness of the development of Slovenia's local securities market," claims Stanislava Zadravec, state undersecretary for public debt management.
  • Over the next decade, the EU expects to welcome at least 10 former Communist countries as new member states. So far, the transition of the EU applicants to market economies has been far from uniform. Laurence Knight reviews governments' progress in developing domestic bond markets, their efforts to diversify the investor base, and how banks are importing capital market expertise
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  • The Bulgarian government has in the last year made serious efforts to develop the country's debt capital markets. For starters, in 2000 it succeeded in extending its yield curve out first to three years and then to five. It plans to take the curve out to 10 years in the near future.