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Sovereigns

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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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  • The Republic of Indonesia added yet another feather to its cap this week, selling its first SEC-registered bond on Monday. The sovereign has long been considered one of the most sophisticated debt issuers in Asia, and its new $4bn transaction shows how far it has come, writes Morgan Davis.
  • Several bankers are leaving HSBC's bond teams, including its head of public sector syndicate, according to sources.
  • The Republic of Iceland looks set to bring its first syndication in over three years before the year end, after mandating banks on Wednesday to run a euro trade.
  • The Republic of Indonesia grabbed $4bn on Monday from its first SEC-registered bond, pricing all the three tranches within its curve while also diversifying its investor base.
  • CEE
    The Republic of Bulgaria has investment grade ratings from all three big rating agencies, after Standard & Poor's last Friday revised the country's credit rating to BBB- from BB+.
  • The Republic of Indonesia is back for its fourth outing in the international debt market this year. But the sovereign is offering something a little different to investors this time around, taking bids for its first SEC-registered bond.