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Debut took a long time but established market access, says country's debt chief
As the Middle East war shakes bond markets, non-sovereign public sector issuers are proving their safe haven status
Sovereign keeps funding guidance unchanged for 2026 but warns against 'adverse effects on growth'
The country is one of the most versatile sovereign issuers, printing across multiple formats
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Yields in the European periphery have moved tighter and tighter over the course of the summer, presaging a strong reception when the euro market reopens next week, bankers say.
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This week in Keeping Tabs: does sustainable finance need to rethink environmental threats, did monetary policy after the last crisis increase well-being, and do we need to worry about sovereign debt levels in developed countries?
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The sustainable finance market changed dramatically in the first half of 2020, as participants responded to the Covid-19 pandemic with a wave of tailored bonds — but the second half could prove even richer, with innovations and new issuers coming.
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Public sector borrowers have wasted no time in returning to the capital markets this week, as borrowers look to protect themselves from a triple whammy of threats looming towards the end of the year — the arrival of the European Union as a giant issuer, a contentious US presidential election and a second wave of Covid-19 infections.
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Will India ever come to the international bond market? Fears of foreign currency exposure and dissenting voices in the government derailed a planned deal last year. Now is the perfect time to try again.
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NatWest Markets has restructured its divisions and given them new leadership. It is also moving some UK corporate-focused bankers over to the ring-fenced bank.