Key facts
- The Philippines is issuing bonds on the international market for the second time this year.
The Philippines is issuing bonds on the international market for the second time this year, taking advantage of lower borrowing costs driven by optimism over a potential US-Iran agreement. The offerings include 5.5-year and 10-year notes, and a reopening of its 2051 bond.

The Philippines' return to the international bond market indicates improved investor sentiment and potentially lower financing costs for the nation's state spending. The pricing of these bonds will serve as a benchmark for future sovereign debt issuances.
The Philippines is accessing the international bond market for the second time this year, taking advantage of a favorable environment with easing borrowing costs driven by optimism over a potential US-Iran agreement. The sovereign issuer is offering new notes with maturities of 5.5 years and 10 years, and is also reopening its bond that matures in January 2051. Initial price guidance for the 5.5-year tranche is set around 85 basis points over US Treasuries, while the 10-year paper is guided at approximately 125 basis points over. The tap of the 25-year bond has an initial indicative yield of 6.1%. The bonds are expected to be priced later during New York trading hours.