© 2026 GlobalCapital, Derivia Intelligence Limited, company number 15235970, 161 Farringdon Rd, London EC1R 3AL. All rights reserved.

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement | Event Participant Terms & Conditions | Cookies

Sovereigns

Top Section/Bond comments/Ad

Top Section/Bond comments/Ad

Most recent


SSA
Two day executions expose dollar issuers to market volatility
◆ 'Pragmatic' and 'flexible' about execution window ◆ Tight spreads to Germany, Netherlands achieved ◆ Trio of euro deals to come on Tuesday
Jessica Pulay, CEO of the UK Debt Management Office, discusses investor engagement
◆ Last krona syndication conducted in 2021 ◆ Issuer presses ahead in pre-selected window despite war ◆ Foreign currency bond left to do in 2026
More articles/Ad

More articles/Ad

More articles

  • Equity and debt markets were fretting on Thursday over the implications of new US sanctions against Russia. A prohibition of US investment in Russian sovereign bonds marked an escalation in tensions, threatening sovereign borrowing costs. It could also damage Russian companies’ chances of funding in the capital markets, write Mariam Meskin and Sam Kerr.
  • The International Development Association is set to make one of its rare outings to the euro market on Tuesday, joining a 20 year from Ireland, which will be the third sovereign deal this week.
  • A pair of European sovereigns hit the market on Tuesday, raising a combined €12.5bn. Austria launched a four and 50 year dual tranche, but it was the short leg that raised eyebrows, demonstrating demand exists even below the ECB deposit rate.
  • SSA
    An unforeseen sell-off in government bonds on April 9 left many market participants scratching their heads as to why it happened, but the primary market has showed no apprehension in the week leading up to it or since. In fact, April's first week saw the highest average subscription ratios since January 2019. And this week, Primary Market Monitor brings you data from the FIG bond market for the first time.
  • Hopes for a rapid European economic recovery are pinned in large part on the EU’s Recovery and Resilience Facility, but Italian insurer Generali is concerned that the plan is already behind schedule.
  • Rating: Baa3/BBB/BBB-