News Results

  1. Gilead Sciences Prices $3 Billion Debt Offering
    MT Newswires | 04:10 AM EDT

    Gilead Sciences (GILD) priced a $3 billion public offering of senior unsecured notes, the company said late Thursday. The offering comprises $500 million of 4.25% notes maturing in 2028, $1 billion of 4.4% notes maturing in 2029, $1 billion of 4.6% notes maturing in 2031, and $500 million of 4.9% notes maturing in 2034.

  2. Global bonds tumble as flaring inflation spooks investors
    Reuters | 02:35 AM EDT

    * Bond market selloff gathers pace. * US Treasury yields at one-year highs. * Euro zone bond yields rise, JGB yields hit record peaks. By Amanda Cooper. The global bond market limped to the end of a bruising week on Friday, as growing evidence of economic damage from the Iran war prompts investors to assume interest rates will rise faster than expected and growth will suffer.

  3. Japanese bond yields hit record highs as rate-hike bets firm
    Reuters | 01:55 AM EDT

    Japanese government bond yields climbed across the curve on Friday, with several tenors reaching record highs on rising bets for Bank of Japan interest rate hikes amid building inflationary pressures. The benchmark 10-year JGB yield rose as much as 10 basis points to 2.73%, the highest level since May 1997.

  4. Analysis-Carry on trading: rate-based G10 currency bets make a comeback
    Reuters | 01:11 AM EDT

    The carry trade, where investors buy high-yielding major currencies and sell low-yielding ones, is having its best run in years, even with major risk-driven moves in global markets. This reflects a combination of low currency volatility, large gaps between interest rates in developed economies and the yen not getting a safe-haven lift from the Iran war.

  5. Bitcoin is still stuck below its 200-day average. Treasury yields may be the reason.
    Coindesk | 12:54 AM EDT

    Rising yields may act as a headwind for assets like bitcoin and gold while potentially benefiting tokenized Treasury markets.

  6. BOJ expected to raise rates to 1.0% in June, hike again in October-December
    Reuters | 12:12 AM EDT

    The Bank of Japan will raise its key interest rate to 1.0% in June, nearly two-thirds of economists said in a Reuters poll, as it presses ahead with efforts to normalise monetary policy amid rising inflation concerns from the war in Iran.

  7. Alphabet sells yen bonds worth $3.6 billion, largest such issue by foreign company
    Reuters | 05/14/26 11:40 PM EDT

    Alphabet has sold 576.5 billion yen in yen-denominated bonds, a term sheet showed on Friday, the largest-ever issue by a foreign company. It is the first yen-denominated debt issue for Alphabet, which like other tech giants is in the midst of a huge investment programme in artificial intelligence and has sought to diversify?sources of funding.

  8. Alphabet sells yen bonds worth $3.6 billion, largest such issue by foreign company
    Reuters | 05/14/26 11:39 PM EDT

    Alphabet has sold 576.5 billion yen in yen-denominated bonds, a term sheet showed on Friday, the largest-ever issue by a foreign company. It is the first yen-denominated debt issue for Alphabet, which like other tech giants is in the midst of a huge investment programme in artificial intelligence and has sought to diversify sources of funding.

  9. Japan may face more price hikes for food, hot spring facilities, central bank says
    Reuters | 05/14/26 11:30 PM EDT

    Japan may face another round of broad-based price increases around summer, as firms ranging from food makers to hot spring facilities consider passing on soaring energy costs from the Middle East conflict, the central bank said on Friday.

  10. Japan's Q1 GDP likely rose on firm exports
    Reuters | 05/14/26 11:20 PM EDT

    Japan's economy is expected to have grown for a second quarter in January-March, supported by recovering exports and solid domestic demand, although the full impact of the Iran war had yet to be felt, a Reuters poll showed on Friday.

In general the bond market is volatile, and fixed income securities carry interest rate risk. (As interest rates rise, bond prices usually fall, and vice versa. This effect is usually more pronounced for longer-term securities.) Fixed income securities also carry inflation risk and credit and default risks for both issuers and counterparties. Unlike individual bonds, most bond funds do not have a maturity date, so avoiding losses caused by price volatility by holding them until maturity is not possible.

Lower-quality debt securities generally offer higher yields, but also involve greater risk of default or price changes due to potential changes in the credit quality of the issuer. Any fixed income security sold or redeemed prior to maturity may be subject to loss.

Before investing, consider the funds' investment objectives, risks, charges, and expenses. Contact Fidelity for a prospectus or, if available, a summary prospectus containing this information. Read it carefully.

fir_news_results