Why Are More Sovereigns Issuing in Euros?
This paper presents and discusses the arguments offered by several sovereigns that have joined a trend starting in 2013 whereby sovereign and corporate issuers, especially in Latin America, have gradually replaced a portion of the funding raised in U.S. dollars with euros. The trend seems to respond to the divergent monetary policies followed by the U.S. Federal Reserve Board and the European Central Bank. The selected country cases state strategic and tactical arguments for increasing their issuance in euros. The strategic reasons relate to internal currency benchmarks and their rationale. In some cases, such substitution is supported by the argument that further diversification in the investor base was needed. This argument was reinforced by the relatively tight conditions in the U.S. dollar market. Tactical arguments refer to the need to open the market to the private sector and raise funding in euros, or the need to access new investors as a preliminary step to attract them to the domestic market. Several countries also admit that the optical effect of lower coupons was a relevant consideration. This paper highlights that it is important that sovereigns avoid making decisions by comparing nominal coupons in both currencies. More important, a formal debt management strategy, including a target for the currency composition, should guide debt managers. Without a strategy, the debt manager cannot tell how the issuance in a particular currency affects the exposure of the debt portfolio to foreign currency risk and helps or not in achieving the debt management objectives.
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Format: | Working Paper biblioteca |
Language: | English |
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World Bank, Washington, DC
2018-01
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Subjects: | BONDS, DEBT STRATEGY, CURRENCY RISK, SOVEREIGN BONDS, MONETARY POLICY, SOVEREIGN DEBT MANAGEMENT, |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/140681517344601798/Why-are-more-sovereigns-issuing-in-Euros-Choosing-between-USD-and-EUR-denominated-bonds https://hdl.handle.net/10986/29289 |
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dig-okr-10986292892024-08-09T08:14:17Z Why Are More Sovereigns Issuing in Euros? Choosing between USD and EUR-Denominated Bonds Velandia, Antonio Cabral, Rodrigo BONDS DEBT STRATEGY CURRENCY RISK SOVEREIGN BONDS MONETARY POLICY SOVEREIGN DEBT MANAGEMENT This paper presents and discusses the arguments offered by several sovereigns that have joined a trend starting in 2013 whereby sovereign and corporate issuers, especially in Latin America, have gradually replaced a portion of the funding raised in U.S. dollars with euros. The trend seems to respond to the divergent monetary policies followed by the U.S. Federal Reserve Board and the European Central Bank. The selected country cases state strategic and tactical arguments for increasing their issuance in euros. The strategic reasons relate to internal currency benchmarks and their rationale. In some cases, such substitution is supported by the argument that further diversification in the investor base was needed. This argument was reinforced by the relatively tight conditions in the U.S. dollar market. Tactical arguments refer to the need to open the market to the private sector and raise funding in euros, or the need to access new investors as a preliminary step to attract them to the domestic market. Several countries also admit that the optical effect of lower coupons was a relevant consideration. This paper highlights that it is important that sovereigns avoid making decisions by comparing nominal coupons in both currencies. More important, a formal debt management strategy, including a target for the currency composition, should guide debt managers. Without a strategy, the debt manager cannot tell how the issuance in a particular currency affects the exposure of the debt portfolio to foreign currency risk and helps or not in achieving the debt management objectives. 2018-01-31T20:44:33Z 2018-01-31T20:44:33Z 2018-01 Working Paper Document de travail Documento de trabajo http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/140681517344601798/Why-are-more-sovereigns-issuing-in-Euros-Choosing-between-USD-and-EUR-denominated-bonds https://hdl.handle.net/10986/29289 English Policy Research Working Paper;No. 8324 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank application/pdf text/plain World Bank, Washington, DC |
institution |
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Estados Unidos |
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US |
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biblioteca |
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America del Norte |
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Biblioteca del Banco Mundial |
language |
English |
topic |
BONDS DEBT STRATEGY CURRENCY RISK SOVEREIGN BONDS MONETARY POLICY SOVEREIGN DEBT MANAGEMENT BONDS DEBT STRATEGY CURRENCY RISK SOVEREIGN BONDS MONETARY POLICY SOVEREIGN DEBT MANAGEMENT |
spellingShingle |
BONDS DEBT STRATEGY CURRENCY RISK SOVEREIGN BONDS MONETARY POLICY SOVEREIGN DEBT MANAGEMENT BONDS DEBT STRATEGY CURRENCY RISK SOVEREIGN BONDS MONETARY POLICY SOVEREIGN DEBT MANAGEMENT Velandia, Antonio Cabral, Rodrigo Why Are More Sovereigns Issuing in Euros? |
description |
This paper presents and discusses the
arguments offered by several sovereigns that have joined a
trend starting in 2013 whereby sovereign and corporate
issuers, especially in Latin America, have gradually
replaced a portion of the funding raised in U.S. dollars
with euros. The trend seems to respond to the divergent
monetary policies followed by the U.S. Federal Reserve Board
and the European Central Bank. The selected country cases
state strategic and tactical arguments for increasing their
issuance in euros. The strategic reasons relate to internal
currency benchmarks and their rationale. In some cases, such
substitution is supported by the argument that further
diversification in the investor base was needed. This
argument was reinforced by the relatively tight conditions
in the U.S. dollar market. Tactical arguments refer to the
need to open the market to the private sector and raise
funding in euros, or the need to access new investors as a
preliminary step to attract them to the domestic market.
Several countries also admit that the optical effect of
lower coupons was a relevant consideration. This paper
highlights that it is important that sovereigns avoid making
decisions by comparing nominal coupons in both currencies.
More important, a formal debt management strategy, including
a target for the currency composition, should guide debt
managers. Without a strategy, the debt manager cannot tell
how the issuance in a particular currency affects the
exposure of the debt portfolio to foreign currency risk and
helps or not in achieving the debt management objectives. |
format |
Working Paper |
topic_facet |
BONDS DEBT STRATEGY CURRENCY RISK SOVEREIGN BONDS MONETARY POLICY SOVEREIGN DEBT MANAGEMENT |
author |
Velandia, Antonio Cabral, Rodrigo |
author_facet |
Velandia, Antonio Cabral, Rodrigo |
author_sort |
Velandia, Antonio |
title |
Why Are More Sovereigns Issuing in Euros? |
title_short |
Why Are More Sovereigns Issuing in Euros? |
title_full |
Why Are More Sovereigns Issuing in Euros? |
title_fullStr |
Why Are More Sovereigns Issuing in Euros? |
title_full_unstemmed |
Why Are More Sovereigns Issuing in Euros? |
title_sort |
why are more sovereigns issuing in euros? |
publisher |
World Bank, Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2018-01 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/140681517344601798/Why-are-more-sovereigns-issuing-in-Euros-Choosing-between-USD-and-EUR-denominated-bonds https://hdl.handle.net/10986/29289 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT velandiaantonio whyaremoresovereignsissuingineuros AT cabralrodrigo whyaremoresovereignsissuingineuros AT velandiaantonio choosingbetweenusdandeurdenominatedbonds AT cabralrodrigo choosingbetweenusdandeurdenominatedbonds |
_version_ |
1807158670673313792 |