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The Manila Times on MSN1h
Treasury note offer raises P300B
THE government has raised P300 billion from an offering of 10-year fixed-rate notes that concluded on Wednesday, the Bureau of the Treasury (BTr) said. The offering of the 10-year benchmark Treasury ...
Strong demand for the 10-year benchmark Fixed-Rate Treasury Notes (FXTNs) allowed the Bureau of the Treasury (BTr) to raise PHP300 billion a day ahead of the offer period deadline. In a statement ...
The Bureau of the Treasury (BTr) said it raised P300 billion from the offering of 10-year benchmark fixed-rate Treasury notes ...
Wednesday afternoon's sale of 5-year Treasury notes was met with above-average bidding by nondealers. The auction produced a stop-through of 1 basis point in a sign of solid demand, according to BMO ...
The “Sell America” trade is hot. So is the “Short Uncle Sam” trade. Betting against U.S. Treasurys using credit-default swaps ...
Tuesday afternoon's $69 billion sale of 2-year Treasury notes was met with below-average bidding by nondealers. The auction produced a tail of a half basis point amid soft demand and nondealer bidding ...
The U.S. Treasury Department's auction of $39 billion in 10-year notes on Wednesday was met with robust demand, signaling a momentary boost in investor confidence amid turbulent bond market ...
As the Trump administration's reciprocal tariffs went into effect on Wednesday, the bond prices slid and the yield on 2-year Treasury notes rose by as much as 0.3 percentage points, marking the ...
The yield on the 30-year Treasury note rose 8 basis points to 4.81%, retracing roughly half of the sharp decline sparked by Trump's unexpected 90-day tariff pause the day before. Meanwhile ...
MANILA, Philippines — The government aims to borrow at least P30 billion from the local debt market via the issuance of fixed-rate Treasury notes (FXTNs) to boost state coffers. In a notice of ...
For instance, on Tuesday the Treasury Department held an auction of three-year notes. “The auction was objectively horrible,” said Lawrence Gillum, chief fixed-income strategist at LPL Financial.
When a downturn appears on the horizon, investors typically crowd into U.S. Treasury notes as a safe haven, viewing the federal government as a source of stability. Not this time. Government bond ...