Mexico’s finance ministry on Tuesday sold $6.3 billion in government bonds through a two-part offering, according to a ministry statement.
The operation consisted of a freshly issued 11-year bond totaling $4.8 billion carrying a 6.25% coupon and maturing in 2037, together with a reopening of an existing security maturing in 2056 with a 6.75% coupon, which added $1.5 billion to that longer-dated issue.
The ministry said the funds raised will be directed toward buying back debt that comes due in 2027 and 2028. Officials framed the transaction as part of a broader effort to reduce refinancing risks by extending the average maturity of the government’s obligations. The statement emphasized that the swap does not constitute additional net debt on the government’s balance sheet.
Demand for the bonds was robust: the sale attracted orders totaling $20.693 billion from roughly 266 institutional investors around the world, registering total demand of 3.3 times the amount actually sold. The ministry noted the transaction remained within the debt ceiling authorized by Congress.
The dual-tranche format combined a significant new medium-term issuance with a targeted expansion of a long-maturity benchmark, allowing the finance ministry to replace nearer-term liabilities with securities that extend further into the future. By specifying that the operation does not add to the stock of debt, the ministry highlighted that the move is intended as a liability management exercise rather than an increment of fiscal borrowing.
The ministry's disclosure of both the order book size and the number of participating institutional investors provides a sense of the market reception and the appetite among global fixed-income buyers for Mexico's paper during this particular transaction.
Summary
Mexico sold $6.3 billion in a two-part bond offering - a new 11-year 6.25% note maturing in 2037 and a $1.5 billion reopening of a 2056 bond at 6.75% - to repurchase debt due in 2027 and 2028, aiming to reduce refinancing risks and lengthen the maturity profile. The sale drew $20.693 billion in orders from about 266 institutional investors and was conducted within the debt limit set by Congress.