Top Section/Bond comments/Ad
Top Section/Bond comments/Ad
Most recent
◆ Supra prices inside peers’ seven year deals ◆ Slim NIP paid after 3bp tightening ◆ ‘Very strong day’ for SSA market
◆ Sharp landing through a noisy open ◆ Grinding towards US Treasuries ◆ Bankers praise execution but warn of residuals building
◆ Last syndication of H1 was 20 times covered ◆ Book was comparable in size to January’s ◆ Smaller deal than some expected, H2 funding plan moves into focus
‘Very normal market’ despite ongoing war and volatility to support another wave of new issues
More articles/Ad
More articles/Ad
More articles
-
Countries should build domestic capital markets that enable borrowers to issue debt in their own currencies, rather than borrow in dollars and face the risk of a spike in interest rates when the dollar rises, the head of the International Financial Corp has told GlobalMarkets, GlobalCapital's sister publication.
-
A pair of debut green bond borrowers made blistering entries to the market on Wednesday. Ireland added its name to the growing list of sovereign green issuers with what on-looking bankers said was a “blowout”, while Société du Grand Paris (SGP) printed at the very top of its size expectations on what was also its debut bond issue of any kind.
-
Fondo de Amortización del Déficit Eléctrico braved volatility in the eurozone periphery bond market on Wednesday for its second benchmark of the year.
-
Agence Française de Développement mandated banks on Wednesday for a 15 year euro benchmark amid rising investor appetite in that part of the curve.
-
SSAs are enjoying strong conditions in dollars, with KfW and the Province of Ontario finding plentiful demand on Wednesday despite bringing deals that on-looking bankers said were “pretty much” in line with secondaries. Kommunalbanken will price a dollar benchmark on Thursday that leads said was following a similar pattern.
-
KfW and the Province of Ontario will hit separate parts of the dollar curve on Wednesday, with the former circulating what one on-looking banker described as “punchy” price thoughts. The deals followed a well-received floating rate note from a German Land that doubled in size.