Top section
Top section
◆15 year a ‘good entry point to the long-end’, says sovereign ◆ Fear of missing out from both old and new investors ◆ Why Italy ran no co-lead pot this time
The sovereign had to move fast to beat the release of US economic data
Deal will bring fourth major multilateral development bank to the market
Data
More articles/Bonc comments/Ad
More articles/Bonc comments/Ad
More articles
-
◆ Fast money acts quick ◆ Bank treasuries weigh ASW levels ◆ 'Real market opener' still awaited
-
Sovereign aspires to stay active in euro market to fund foreign reserves and set benchmark for Icelandic issuers
-
The first half of the year was an eventful and volatile one in the government bond market, and the second half threatens more uncertainty. Sovereign issuers are dealing with steeper curves as investors demand higher term premia. Meanwhile, deficit dynamics are shifting, especially as some countries face up to higher defence and infrastructure spending. GlobalCapital gathered senior funding officials from the EU, Greece, Ireland, Italy and Portugal in June in London to discuss how their funding plans had fared so far, how they are developing their investor bases and how they plan to tackle the uncertainties that lie ahead.
-
Plans for trades in niche currencies are on hold until 2026
-
Club-style PP helps issuer sidestep summer execution risks
-
Veteran funding official to exit after more than three decades
Sub-sections
-
Sponsored by Islamic Development Bank (IsDB)
Sukuk market’s next chapter: Financing the future, sustainably
-
Sponsored by CAF – Development Bank of Latin America and the Caribbean
CAF gearing up to transform regional development
-
Sponsored by European Investment Bank
European Investment Bank: Supporting sustainable development in North Africa
-
Comment