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‘Amazing’ reception for long dated syndications but issuers explore different options amid persistant duration risk
German bond house adds to growing roster of primary dealerships
◆ AFT's Antoine Deruennes says 'clear message' showed demand for 30 year ◆ Speedy execution before US employment data ◆ Green OAT syndication next
◆15 year a ‘good entry point to the long-end’, says sovereign ◆ Fear of missing out from both old and new investors ◆ Why Italy ran no co-lead pot this time
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Agence France Trésor is about to finish deciding the scope of eligible green projects that could be funded by its green OAT issuance in 2018, and will announce this to the market by mid-January.
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Sweden’s finance ministry is expected to receive in early January the report of a special commission it set up a year ago to consider how to promote green bonds, including the merits of the Swedish government issuing one.
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The green OAT issuance programme of France involves a cost to the issuer, but this has so far been compensated for by the slightly cheaper funding France can get by issuing green bonds.
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The people of Catalonia will on Thursday vote in a snap regional election called following the independence referendum earlier on October 1, which caused the Spanish national government to take control of the Catalan parliament.
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Estonia plans to become the first sovereign to dip its toes into the still murky waters of cryptocurrencies.
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As GlobalCapital foreshadowed last week, HSBC has made changes to its EMEA debt capital markets syndicate desk, run by Adam Bothamley.