Greece re-enters bond market after three years
Greece has returned to the bond market for the first time in three years after issuing its first five-year euro-denominated bond at a yield of around 4.75%.
Greece has returned to the bond market for the first time in three years after issuing its first five-year euro-denominated bond at a yield of around 4.75%.
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European markets have signalled their approval for an eleventh-hour EU and IMF deal to provide Greece with another giant loan.
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WH Ireland’s head of wealth management Roderick Buchanan has been regaining confidence in European equities in spite of “huge” political risks.
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Societe Generale has warned investors that there are pieces of the current macroeconomic puzzle that do not fit.
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Investors will remember 2015 as a year spent trying to guess what major central banks around the world would do or say next.
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Alexis Tsipras’s resignation last night and poor factory orders from China on Friday have seen red ink flow across global markets.
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Ask a panel of investors where the best growth opportunities are, and you can bet a fair amount will say European equities. But amid the furore, are they actually really taking the plunge?
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Investor redemptions coupled with “great uncertainty” in the markets led to Liontrust Asset Management’s AUM dropping £36m in Q2 2015.
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News that Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras has seemingly given in to creditor demands certainly cheered markets yesterday.
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The leading European equities indices have jumped this morning as reports emerge indicating a deal has been reached to offer Greece a new bailout and keep it in the eurozone.
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Everyone is getting in a panic about ‘Grexit’, but it’s the return of the term ‘PIIGS’ that really grates.
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S&P Dow Jones Indices has said its data indicates bond market contagion stemming from the Greece situation is not a huge concern.
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