Emese Bartha's profile photo

Emese Bartha

Frankfurt am Main

Government Bond Reporter at The Wall Street Journal

Government Bond Reporter at Dow Jones Newswires

Government bond reporter at Dow Jones Newswires/The Wall Street Journal; Covering European bond auctions, syndications. Often other, non-bond stuff, too.

Articles

  • 1 week ago | marketscreener.com | Emese Bartha

    By Emese Bartha Italy sold a total of 11 billion euros ($12.41 billion) in a dual-tranche bond transaction via a bank syndicate on Wednesday, one of the lead managers said. In one leg of the issue, Italy sold 8 billion euros in new July 2032 BTP, for which books closed in excess of 50 billion euros, including joint lead manager demand, the same bank said. The spread for this issue was set at 13 basis points above the 3.15% November 2031 BTP yield, it said.

  • 1 week ago | tradingview.com | Emese Bartha

    By Emese BarthaItaly sold a total of 11 billion euros ($12.41 billion) in a dual-tranche bond transaction via a bank syndicate on Wednesday, one of the lead managers said. In one leg of the issue, Italy sold 8 billion euros in new July 2032 BTP, for which books closed in excess of 50 billion euros, including joint lead manager demand, the same bank said. The spread for this issue was set at 13 basis points above the 3.15% November 2031 BTP yield, it said.

  • 1 week ago | morningstar.com | Emese Bartha

    By Emese Bartha Italy hired banks for a dual-tranche government bond syndication, with the transaction planned in the near future, subject to market conditions, one of the banks said Tuesday. The transaction will include a new seven-year conventional bond, or BTP, with maturity in July 2032, the same bank said. It will also include the sale of 3 billion euros ($3.41 billion) in a new May 2056-dated inflation-linked bond, or BTPei.

  • 1 week ago | wsj.com | Emese Bartha

    Updated April 9, 2025 5:05 am ETU.S. Treasury yields continued to surge after President Trump’s sweeping duties, including a 104% tariff on Chinese goods, took effect Wednesday and investors raced to pull money out of bonds. As the trade war between the U.S. and the rest of the world escalates, the market is trying to figure out what this means for the growth and inflation outlook both in the U.S. and globally. Copyright ©2025 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

  • 2 weeks ago | wsj.com | Emese Bartha

    The moves represented something of a return to normal amid relief for investors in U.S. government debtBond markets were adjusting to U.S. President Trump’s shifting tariff strategy Thursday, with Treasury yields continuing to ease sharply even as Japanese and eurozone bond yields rose. The moves represented something of a return to normal amid huge relief for investors in U.S. government debt.

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Emese Bartha
Emese Bartha @EmeseBartha
11 Mar 19

Talking Markets: ECB’s Pessimism to Keep Eurozone Bond Yields Low https://t.co/pfpnV51Wyk via @WSJ

Emese Bartha
Emese Bartha @EmeseBartha
5 Mar 19

Greece Issues First 10-Year Bond Since Before Bailout https://t.co/Krw6l19BQc via @WSJ w @nstamouli

Emese Bartha
Emese Bartha @EmeseBartha
29 Jan 19

Greece issues first post-bailout bond https://t.co/BCVQmblC49 via @WSJ w @nstamouli