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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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Australia on Tuesday announced its intention to issue its first 30 year government bond. After a summer of downgrade threats for the triple-A rated sovereign, it hopes to tempt overseas investors back into its bonds with offers of juicy yields. But market experts are not convinced it will work, writes Silas Brown.
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The IMF’s approval of a long-awaited disbursement of funds to Ukraine could help set the stage for an unguaranteed sovereign bond issue, local bankers said on Thursday.
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Lithuania was on track to print a tightly priced reopening of its 2035s on Thursday morning with bankers estimating a 4bp–13bp premium at initial price thoughts.
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The Australian Office of Financial Management (AOFM) has said it intends to issue the Australian government's first ever 30 year benchmark bond in October.
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The last round of IMF lending to developed market countries (before the European sovereign crisis) was 40 years ago this autumn — when Britain was locked out of the capital markets and had to go ‘cap in hand’ to the Fund.