Top Section/Bond comments/Ad
Top Section/Bond comments/Ad
Most recent
◆ First of seven syndications breaks multiple records ◆ Investor engagement and communications helped stable execution ◆ Smaller programme this year but ‘still a lot’ to tackle
Busy and ‘euro-heavy’ week ahead but dollar pipeline also building with issuers set to bring forward bond plans
◆ Minimal premium paid ◆ Size at top of range ◆ Issuer seizes upon stability
◆ 'Cautious' start say some market participants ◆ New issue premium debated ◆ Price and size praised by rivals
More articles/Ad
More articles/Ad
More articles
-
Governments’ interest in issuing green bonds remains very patchy, despite the rapid growth in other parts of the market. Among large banks, issuing green bonds now seems almost de rigueur, but that is certainly not the case for governments.
-
To help celebrate the 20th anniversary of the setting up of the UK Debt Management Office, GlobalCapital gathered together some of the UK Gilt market’s leading traders, investors and bankers, with its CEO Sir Robert Stheeman, to discuss the state of the bond markets, how they have changed since the DMO was established in April 1998 and how the government’s investor base and bond issuance are likely to evolve over the coming years.
-
Now that inflation has returned to Europe, but the economy is looking delicate, we will find out exactly how 'data-driven' Draghi's governing council really is.
-
Ukrainian Eurobonds weakened early this week as sentiment waned, despite some progress in an anti-corruption law that is a key condition for the disbursement of the next round of funding from the International Monetary Fund, and as the market contemplated the dismissal of respected finance minister Oleksandr Danylyuk.
-
In a rare instance for CEE countries, Romania has printed 30 year dollar bonds.
-
Quantitative easing, perhaps the single most important factor affecting bond prices over the past three years, could be coming to a long awaited end this year. Members of the European Central Bank governing council seemed to hint as much this week, causing govvie spreads to gap wider, writes Lewis McLellan.