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Sovereigns

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Switch auctions to make comeback as DMO chief discusses record breaking deal and 2026-27 funding
◆ Sovereign breaks BTP orderbook record again ◆ Demand was huge, but not because price was cheap ◆ Curve stability despite addition of jumbo 10 year
◆ Biggest and most popular green OAT ever ◆ Third and final syndication came earlier than in previous years ◆ Leading position in green bonds and EGB market affirmed
◆ First of seven syndications breaks multiple records ◆ Investor engagement and communications helped stable execution ◆ Smaller programme this year but ‘still a lot’ to tackle
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  • Italy’s bond yields hit their highest levels at auction since June 2015 at the country’s final bond sale before Sunday's constitutional reform referendum that could lead to the resignation of prime minister Matteo Renzi.
  • The Italian Treasury is on Tuesday set to hold its last bond auction before the country holds a referendum on constitutional reform that analysts believe could have an impact on eurozone periphery spreads into the new year.
  • The UK Debt Management Office will have to raise an additional £20.6bn this financial year, including through an extra syndication, but SSA bankers are confident that there will be enough demand to meet the supply.
  • The UK Debt Management Office will have to raise an additional £20.6bn this financial year, including an extra syndication, following the announcement of the government’s borrowing plans in Wednesday’s autumn statement by chancellor of the exchequer, Philip Hammond.
  • The public sector borrower bond market on Tuesday had its first busy day since the election of Donald Trump as US president, but conditions turned rocky again on Wednesday after a report that the European Central Bank may try to boost the volume of bonds it can lend.
  • That the Canadian finance minister has had to explain that the UK is behind the US, European Union and China in line for trade talks is not only bad news for the UK economy and the politicians in charge of it. It also highlights how 'post-truth' politics — or, in common parlance, lying — is set to play havoc with issuers’ funding plans.