© 2026 GlobalCapital, Derivia Intelligence Limited, company number 15235970, 161 Farringdon Rd, London EC1R 3AL. All rights reserved.

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement | Event Participant Terms & Conditions | Cookies

Sub-sovereigns

Top Section/Ad

Top Section/Ad

Most recent


◆ German state executes intraday trade ◆ Tenor near ‘sweet spot’ on euro curve ◆ Fair value only ‘theoretical’ in current market
SSA
Recent deals showed that investor appetite for SSA credit remains
◆ 'Accelerated execution' due to market uncertainty ◆ Popular deal spotted close to fair value ◆ Momentum accounts 'less active'
SSA
Primary market for public sector unlikely to see large transactions until after Easter, reckon bankers
More articles/Ad

More articles/Ad

More articles

  • SSA
    Italian SSAs drew a mixed bag this week, as one sub-sovereign outlined plans for a long dated deal, while the Italian government’s borrowing costs rose in a series of auctions except a sale of 10 year debt — which only the vagaries of the repo market kept in check.
  • As the Canadian financial sector and provinces strive to create a North American renminbi hub within the sovereign’s borders, SSA issuers from the country have shown their support for the currency by returning to the dim sum market with a bang.
  • The Province of Trento's funding arm is set to bring a 20 year medium term note to market in the coming weeks, following a €150m deal from earlier in the month.
  • The Province of British Columbia (BC) priced its second offshore renminbi bond at 2.85% late on October 28. BC’s familiar name, the deal’s SEC registration and current strong RMB internationalisation momentum helped the deal attract a good showing from investors in the Americas. Also notable was a big jump in European participation from BC's debut RMB bond last year.
  • British Columbia raised Rmb3bn ($490.7m) with its second ever dim sum bond on Tuesday.
  • The Province of British Columbia (BC) has launched a benchmark size offshore renminbi bond through Bank of China and HSBC. It will mark BC’s second RMB bond, after it became in October 2013 the first sub-sovereign issuer to sell a dim sum bond.