DUBLIN, Jan 7: Ireland’s National Treasury Management Agency (NTMA) said on Wednesday it was seeking to raise 3 billion euros ($4.09 billion) in a five-year benchmark bond and planned a further foray later this year.

“We are quite confident we will be able to do a 3 billion deal,” the NTMA’s director of funding and debt management, Oliver Whelan, told Reuters in an interview.

“It’s pretty early but there is a good spread of investors from right across Europe,” Whelan said after order books opened on Wednesday.

Investors included central banks and asset managers, he said.

Price guidance has been set at mid-swaps plus 90 basis points area, Whelan said, adding that the book was expected to close on Thursday.

“The idea is we’ll leave it open to see how much interest there may be from Asia overnight,” he said.

A glut of euro zone sovereign borrowing is expected this year as governments seek to raise funds to pay for their recession-fighting fiscal stimulus packages.

—Reuters

Opinion

Editorial

A political resolution
Updated 13 Dec, 2024

A political resolution

It seems that there has been some belated realisation that a power vacuum has been created at expense of civilian leadership.
High price increases
13 Dec, 2024

High price increases

FISCAL stabilisation prescribed by the IMF can be expensive — for the common people — in more ways than one. ...
Beyond HOTA
13 Dec, 2024

Beyond HOTA

IN a welcome demonstration of HOTA’s oversight role, kidney transplant services have been suspended at...
General malfeasance
Updated 12 Dec, 2024

General malfeasance

Will Gen Faiz Hameed's trial prove to be a long overdue comeuppance or just another smokescreen?
Electricity rates
12 Dec, 2024

Electricity rates

THE government is renegotiating power purchase agreements with private power producers to slash their capacity...
Aggression in Syria
12 Dec, 2024

Aggression in Syria

TAKING advantage of the chaos in post-Assad Syria, Israel has proceeded to grab more of the Arab state’s land,...