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Amid tight budgetary conditions, including persistent inflation, volatile markets and geopolitical tensions, sovereign issuers in the EU face continuous pressure to fulfil borrowing requirements. Simultaneously, these same issuers are having to confront different challenges that range from the growing impact of hedge funds in their order books, and whether this is a good or a bad thing, how to convince new investors that their home currency, the euro, is an alternative to the dollar and how aligned EU capital markets should become and what form this should take. GlobalCapital assembled sovereign debt issuers to discuss borrowing requirements and how they are being met, what the diversification of their investor bases means for the products they offer and the benefits of harmonisation and simpler regulation in the EU.
Supplying a ‘diversity of instruments’ is important for sovereign to meet needs of different investors, says DMO chief
◆ EDC prints tightest US dollar deal from a Canadian this year ◆ Tight spread to US Treasuries 'looks good for Canada risk' ◆ World Bank mandates seven year dollar floater
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New funding entities could help Italy but benefit will be magnified with tighter spreads
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Two more issuers will also launch deals this week
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French issuer walks away with €500m before another likely 75bp eurozone rate rise
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More issuers have decided to do dollar funding ahead of another potentially large US rate increase
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Italian sport and culture funder occupies grey area between SSA and FIG
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New PM hoped to bring financial stability as Moody’s turns negative
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