Germany will increase the amount of federal treasury bonds issued by one-fifth next year, to a record 512 billion euros to fund a spending plan aimed at repairing aging infrastructure and modernizing the military. According to a statement released on Thursday, Germany's financial institution responsible for managing government debt plans to issue about 318 billion euros of securities in the capital market through auctions and 176 billion euros through the money market. Additionally, between 16 billion and 19 billion euros of green bonds will be issued. This total is higher than 425 billion euros in 2025, and also surpassed the historical peak of about 500 billion euros in 2023. Officials plan to carry out a total of four joint underwriting sessions in the coming year. The government led by German Chancellor Mertz is trying to revive Europe's largest economy. The country's growth has been weak since the pandemic. Its government has pledged to invest 500 billion euros in infrastructure funds over the next ten years.

Zhitongcaijing · 2d ago
Germany will increase the amount of federal treasury bonds issued by one-fifth next year, to a record 512 billion euros to fund a spending plan aimed at repairing aging infrastructure and modernizing the military. According to a statement released on Thursday, Germany's financial institution responsible for managing government debt plans to issue about 318 billion euros of securities in the capital market through auctions and 176 billion euros through the money market. Additionally, between 16 billion and 19 billion euros of green bonds will be issued. This total is higher than 425 billion euros in 2025, and also surpassed the historical peak of about 500 billion euros in 2023. Officials plan to carry out a total of four joint underwriting sessions in the coming year. The government led by German Chancellor Mertz is trying to revive Europe's largest economy. The country's growth has been weak since the pandemic. Its government has pledged to invest 500 billion euros in infrastructure funds over the next ten years.