Economy
Abu Dhabi Returns to Dollar Bond Market With Multi-Tranche Deal
(Bloomberg) — Abu Dhabi is back in the dollar bond market, extending a debt binge by countries raising cash buffers to weather the pandemic.
The Gulf emirate plans a three-part offering, according to a person familiar with the matter. The indicative pricing on the longest tranche of 50 years is in the 3% area, the person said, who isn’t authorized to speak publicly and asked not to be identified.
With the global economy on a slow path to recovery, corporate treasurers around the world are looking to stockpile cash, even if it means paying more. Abu Dhabi is among the list of countries selling bonds to bolster their finances in the face of lower oil and gas prices.
Brent crude, the international oil benchmark, has averaged about $42 a barrel this year, down about one-third from last year. Prices are still recovering after being hammered earlier this year by a combination of the pandemic and a brief price war between Saudi Arabia and Russia.
Abu Dhabi raised $7 billion in April also through a three-tranche bond offering and added another $3 billion to it a month later.
-
Economy2 months agoNumber of Workers in GCC Countries Increase From 2021 to 2025
-
OER Magazines2 months agoDossier Oman: Banking, Finance & Insurance Special Edition
-
Magazines1 month agoOER Magazine April 2026 Issue
-
Oman1 month agoREVIEW: WHOOP and the Rise of Performance Luxury
-
Economy2 months agoElectricity Tariffs Reduced for Residential Use – What It Means for You
-
Lifestyle1 month agoAP x Swatch Royal Pop: A Rule-Breaking Collaboration That Takes the Royal Oak Off the Wrist
-
News1 month agoANALYSIS: Oil Slips As Peace Hopes Reprice Middle East Risk, But Supply Tightness Keeps Market On Edge
-
News2 months agoOPINION – New CEO, New Era: What’s Next for Apple?
