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An public sector issuer breaking a record with a deal this week became so common a claim it began to sound like, well, a broken record. But questions remain about how robust demand really is
Markets ‘not out of the woods yet’ as large sovereigns shorten execution process to de-risk issuance
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
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The UK Debt Management Office has picked the banks that will run its next syndication, scheduled for the week beginning May 23.
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The Republic of Indonesia has mandated three banks to work on a Samurai bond that is expected to launch later in the year.
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Spain made a storming entrance to the 50 year benchmark club this week, lending weight to the possibility that the tenor could become a more common maturity as eurozone rates scrape along at record low levels.
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Slovenia took advantage of low euro funding costs this week to prudently manage its debt by swapping out of dollars and into euros.
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Central and eastern European sovereign bond issuers can more and more rely on rates investors to come into their bond deals. But many of these borrowers are still handled by investment banks’ emerging market teams. So when is an issuer SSA rather than EM?