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Critics doubted the EU Green Bond Standard would catch on, but it is gaining new issuers and a following from investors
Issuance across euros and dollars is set to rise
The sovereign rarely issues more than once a year on international markets
Recent Italy syndication prompts talk of change in how sovereigns manage syndicates
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The Kangaroo market has faced a variety of challenges but, for each challenge, it has evolved to provide new pockets of value for investors and to meet borrowers’ requirements as they respond to the constantly shifting market realities. By Lewis McLellan.
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US based bond investors said that Argentina’s first euro-denominated bond issue for 15 years came too tight for them, as bankers said this was likely to be exactly what the sovereign had been looking for. However, the level also looked tight for yield-hungry European accounts, with the bonds trading down around a point on Thursday.
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Island nation Bermuda is understood to be targeting Tuesday, October 11 to issue its first bond in three years, according to one investor, after beginning a roadshow earlier this week.
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It was all going so well for Italy. Its entry to the 50 year bond club on Tuesday pulled in a monstrous €18.5bn of orders. But almost immediately the bond became tradeable, the market frothed with talk of the European Central Bank tapering QE, sending Eurozone periphery bonds into a tailspin to remind everyone just how much markets are in the grip of central bank policy. Lewis McLellan reports.
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The Republic of Namibia, which has outlined plans to issue around $5bn of loans and bonds over the next 10 years, is to undertake a non-deal roadshow with fixed income investors in the US and UK.
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