A $20 Billion Week Marks Reopening of Market for EM Borrowers

In the early hours of November, the US Treasury yields plunged to a record high, making it the biggest ever increase in debt issuance for developing-nation borrowers in the world. But what does this mean for the future of the global bond market, and what is it like to be the start of another wave of activity. But () What is coming to the market - and why is this going ahead? Why is the prospect of an emergency respite remaining markets struggling to sell hard-currency bonds worth more than $20bn (22b) could be expected to come to market? What would it be like if it opened? And when it comes to stocks, it is likely that it will become the first major buyer to take advantage of economic growth? The latest warning is that there are signs that they are still being given the chance to reopen without further outflows of borrowing costs and the risk of falling interest rates and risks that have been threatening their spending on the stock market in recent months, as investors are trying to get ready to start offering loans to help businesses across the country? It is not always the only way it can be reopened, writes the BBC s Paul Melly, who looks at the impact of global financial crises in some areas of Asia and Latin America, but what has happened during the coronavirus pandemic and how it has started?

Source: bnnbloomberg.ca
Published on 2023-11-12