© 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


◆ Issuer’s first public dollar deal since late 2021 ◆ New five, 10 and 30 year offered simultaneously ◆ Interest from European sovereigns grows for dollars
SSA
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
More articles/Ad

More articles/Ad

More articles

  • A pair of sovereigns entered the euro market this week, both returning to the long end of the curve for the first time in three years and drawing large books.
  • CEE
    Montenegro followed Egypt to the euro bond market this week, offering investors another chance to take on single-B risk in the currency.
  • The State of Qatar had taken orders of $32.5bn by lunchtime on Thursday, putting to bed any concerns that Saudi Arabia’s $11bn trade would cannibalise demand for its regional rival. In fact the strong performance of Saudi’s paper in the secondary market has helped boost support for Qatar’s trade, according to a banker on the deal.
  • The Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka grabbed $2.5bn from its largest bond on record on Wednesday, as investors showed their support to a country that has been buffeted by numerous problems recently.
  • Portugal printed its first new long dated benchmark since September 2014, drawing the week’s largest order book in the public sector bond market for its 15 year deal.
  • Despite the political risk surrounding the formation of the Italian government, one asset manager believes its debt is better value than that of some of its peers in the peripheral Europe.