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Sovereigns

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Bloc to price new five year and 20 year tap as Rome set to end dollar hiatus
A Kilt will pay a spread over Gilts it cannot justify on credit, which makes it a political gesture rather than a funding tool
◆ How UK's likely next PM can woo the bond market ◆ Fibre ABS coming to Europe ◆ The rise of the corporate Kangaroo
UK government can find direction by being determined on defence and green growth
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  • Rating: Ba1/BBB-/BBB-
  • Italy’s 10 year yield dropped to its lowest level in almost two months this week, after the country’s top government officials suggested they could target a budget deficit as low as 2% in 2019.
  • CEE
    Fears that the Russian Federation's €1bn bond issue would only find demand domestically seem to have been assuaged as a source close to the deal said well over half the deal was sold to international investors. That source also denied the deal was in any way designed to bait the West, and said its timing was simply a matter of wanting to get ahead of worsening market conditions.
  • The public sector market for sterling benchmark issues has shut down earlier than usual as a result of a plunge in Gilt yields — caused by concerns surrounding the UK’s exit from the European Union — which has made new issues unattractive for investors.
  • CEE
    Russia is doing it again — for the second time this year it has picked yet another politically unpalatable week to print a sovereign bond. It seems to be sticking a middle finger up to the west as it rolls around in cash and shows off the access the country has to capital markets. But if that was the motivation behind this issue, it has not accomplished its goals.
  • The European Central Bank is likely to decide soon whether to launch a new targeted long-term refinancing operation (TLTRO III) for banks. The market may already be forcing its hand, but the EU’s fight with Italy means the choice has wide-reaching implications.