Greece is the word: Nation returns to bond markets with €3bn issue

clock

Greece raised €3bn of five-year money yesterday in its first foray back into the bond markets since the eurozone debt crisis.

The Greek government had initially hoped to attract issue debt with a coupon of between 5-5.25%, but lowered the figure after the issue was more than eight times oversubscribed. The issue eventually came priced at a yield of 4.95% - lower than many initial estimates - after generating over €20bn of orders, showing the rampant demand amongst investors for peripheral debt. Greece came close to default in 2010 after it emerged it had used a number of investment banks to conceal the extent of its borrowing. Yields on the country's debt rocked, with one-year paper hitting 111% as invest...

To continue reading this article...

Join Investment Week for free

  • Unlimited access to real-time news, analysis and opinion from the investment industry, including the Sustainable Hub covering fund news from the ESG space
  • Get ahead of regulatory and technological changes affecting fund management
  • Important and breaking news stories selected by the editors delivered straight to your inbox each day
  • Weekly members-only newsletter with exclusive opinion pieces from leading industry experts
  • Be the first to hear about our extensive events schedule and awards programmes

Join now

 

Already an Investment Week
member?

Login

More on Investment

Trium Capital's Donald Pepper: Tariff tide reveals those swimming uncorrelated

Trium Capital's Donald Pepper: Tariff tide reveals those swimming uncorrelated

'Conventional diversification no longer provides adequate protection'

Donald Pepper
clock 30 April 2025 • 4 min read
Event Voice: Your questions answered by FSSA Investment Managers at the Emerging Markets Conference

Event Voice: Your questions answered by FSSA Investment Managers at the Emerging Markets Conference

Angus Sandison, Investment Analyst, FSSA Investment Managers
clock 24 April 2025 • 3 min read
US M&A spending jumps 50% in March as deal volume declines

US M&A spending jumps 50% in March as deal volume declines

Near 6% drop in number of deals happening

Eve Maddock-Jones
clock 23 April 2025 • 1 min read
Trustpilot