Oman raised $3 billion with its first foray in the international debt markets this year after receiving strong demand from global investors hunting for high returns in a low yield environment. Investors made orders worth nearly $14 billion for papers offered at a final yield of 4.95 percent for the long five-year bonds, due in February 2025, and 6 percent for the 10-year paper, according to a document issued by one of the banks leading the debt sale. That is below an initial price guidance of around 5.375 percent and 6.375 percent on Thursday. Oman issued $750 million in 5-1/2 year and $2.25 billion in 10-year bonds, a separate document showed. Sources previously told Reuters that the bonds would likely be $2 billion in size and be used to cover part of Oman’s budget deficit, estimated at nearly $7.3 billion this year. Oman’s finances have been hurt by a slump in oil prices and the country is struggling to tame a widening fiscal deficit. The bond sale was seen as a test of Oman’s ability to tap foreign debt markets after it was downgraded to junk status by all the three major rating agencies and comes amid favorable market conditions across emerging markets. “The low yield environment is a supportive theme. We have a rising number of negatively yielding securities and credits with attractive yield levels like Oman should get a boost,” said Sergey Dergachev, a manager of emerging market corporate debt at Germany-based Union Investment, while the deal was marketed on Thursday. The initial price guidance put the new paper at a premium of around 30 basis points over Oman’s existing debt curve, said Dergachev. Citi, JPMorgan and Standard Chartered have been hired to coordinate the transaction. The three banks are also bookrunners together with First Abu Dhabi Bank, MUFG, Natixis and Societe Generale.
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