Singapore’s Temasek mulling to sell first euro-bond in 4 years

Bloomberg

Singapore’s Temasek Holdings Pte is eyeing its first euro-bond sale in almost four years, as low borrowing costs draw more Asian issuers to Europe.
The state investor may sell 12-year and 30-year benchmark notes, according to a person familiar with the matter, who is not authorised to speak publicly and asked not to be identified. The AAA rated issuer is the largest shareholder in a list of Singaporean companies including Singapore Airlines Ltd, oil-rig builder Keppel Corp. and Singapore Telecommunications Ltd.
Temasek may join a wave of Asian and global issuers turning to Europe’s bond market, as negative interest rates and investor demand holds down borrowing costs versus dollars. China sold its first euro bond in 15 years last week, stoking a record year for emerging-market euro sovereign sales, and US companies have also issued an unprecedented amount of single-currency notes.
Temasek last month offered to buy a controlling stake in Keppel for about S$4 billion ($3 billion). It currently owns about 20% of the company, the world’s biggest oil-rig builder.
The state investor, which has two euro bonds outstanding, is more broadly seeking capital for a range of projects including 5G expansion at M1 Ltd, the Singaporean phone company it helped acquire. It is also seeking investments that will make it more more palatable to environmentally minded clients.
Singapore’s export-reliant economy has seen a downturn in the second half of the year amid trade tensions between the US and China, two of its biggest trading partners. Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong has said the city-state will be “lucky” to achieve positive growth for the year.

Leave a Reply

Send this to a friend