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Vladimir Tarantaev, CFA, PMP
Vladimir Tarantaev, a CFA expert in fixed income, has a strong track record in credit analysis at CIS banks and a diverse background in math-physics and astronomy.
Vladimir Tarantaev
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12.11.2025
U.S. Companies Step Up Euro Bond Issuance Amid Attractive Funding Conditions
U.S. Companies Step Up Euro Bond Issuance Amid Attractive Funding Conditions
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U.S. corporate debt issuance in euros has surged to its highest levels in years. From tech to telecoms, heavyweight U.S. corporates are raising billions in euro-denominated bonds, chasing lower funding costs and strong investor demand. Discover why some of the world’s largest names have chosen Europe as their funding destination of the moment.

U.S. corporates have been unusually active in Europe’s bond market in recent weeks. Issuance volumes this year have climbed sharply: U.S. borrowers have been credited with about $100 billion of euro-denominated deals as they tap deep European demand. Three recent headline transactions illustrate the trend.

Alphabet sold a very large package that included roughly €6.5-6.75 billion of euro notes as part of a broader $25 billion funding programme, a scale that immediately makes the bonds benchmark lines in European credit indices. Consumer-staples group Colgate-Palmolive printed a €600 million 10-year bond at a 3.25% coupon, while telecom heavy-issuer Verizon brought a €2.25 billion euro tranche alongside a £1 billion sterling tranche in large hybrid/subordinated format. These deals - big, liquid and heavily marketed - have become regular features of primary desks this quarter.

Why are U.S. issuers coming to Europe? Several straightforward drivers explain the move. First, funding costs in euros have often been cheaper or more attractive on a hedged basis than dollar markets (the ECB-rate dynamics and relative dollar weakness make euro funding economical for multinational issuers). Second, European investor demand - from insurance companies, pension funds and long-duration investors hunting high-quality paper that matches liabilities - is unusually strong.

Bondfish opinion

For investors, the inflow of high-quality U.S. names broadens the euro credit universe and improves liquidity in benchmark lines. Retail investors who want exposure to these placements are generally better served via short/medium-duration euro investment-grade funds or ETFs rather than attempting single-name purchases (which carry denomination, documentation and liquidity hurdles).

Author
Vladimir Tarantaev, CFA, PMP
Vladimir Tarantaev, a CFA expert in fixed income, has a strong track record in credit analysis at CIS banks and a diverse background in math-physics and astronomy.
Vladimir Tarantaev
This article does not constitute investment advice or personal recommendation. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future results. Bondfish does not recommend using the data and information provided as the only basis for making any investment decision. You should not make any investment decisions without first conducting your own research and considering your own financial situation.
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