Top section
Top section
Large auctions, new 30 year and ‘two-lens' pricing approach among key expectations for bloc’s July-December funding
◆ DMO chief Jessica Pulay on why 2041s won out ◆ Swift execution 'a hallmark' of transaction ◆ Cover ratio slips but breadth holds firm
◆ Debate whether priced through US Treasuries ◆ Tighter than fixed ◆ Tenor handed investors optically pleasing spread
Data
More articles/Bonc comments/Ad
More articles/Bonc comments/Ad
More articles
-
The UK demonstrated this week the power of investor appetite for products offering protection from the burgeoning threat of inflation. However, while there is huge demand across Europe, few issuers find themselves in a position to capitalise, writes Lewis McLellan.
-
Rates traders were sanguine about the market outlook over the next month in the belief that low supply and high redemptions will support spreads. But long term questions about the extent of central bank asset purchases, both in the US and Europe, are expected to come back to haunt them.
-
Bpifrance has announced a euro benchmark, following in the footsteps of two other French issuers that came to market this week.
-
The State of North Rhine Westphalia launched a dual tranche bond on Thursday, having postponed the deal due to last week’s crowded and volatile market.
-
The UK issued a £4bn index-linked Gilt maturing in 2039 on Tuesday, experiencing hot demand as investors flocked to secure protection from the threat of inflation.
-
Asfinag, the Austrian state-owned agency that manages the country's motorways, had the euro market to itself on Wednesday. A cheap starting point earned the borrower a huge order book for the €500m bond.
Sub-sections
-
Sponsored by Islamic Development Bank (IsDB)
Sukuk market’s next chapter: Financing the future, sustainably
-
Sponsored by CAF – Development Bank of Latin America and the Caribbean
CAF gearing up to transform regional development
-
Sponsored by European Investment Bank
European Investment Bank: Supporting sustainable development in North Africa
-
Comment