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Alphabet’s $3.6B Yen Bond Sale is Largest by Foreign Firm

TOKYO, May 15 (Reuters) - Alphabet has sold 576.5 billion yen ($3.6 billion) 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.

The parent of Google ​has flagged capital expenditure of as much as $190 billion this year and has issued bonds in ​euros, sterling, Canadian dollars and Swiss ​francs.

Demand was strong among domestic and international investors, ‌Mizuho ⁠Securities, one of the underwriters, said, adding that the sale beat the previous record of a 430 billion yen issuance ​by Warren ​Buffett's Berkshire ⁠Hathaway in 2019.

The term sheet showed Alphabet would issue bonds ​maturing in 3, 5, 7, 10, ​15, ⁠30 and 40 years, with coupons ranging from 1.965% to 4.599%.

Mizuho Securities, Bank of ⁠America ​and Morgan Stanley are ​acting as joint bookrunners on the transaction.

($1 = 158.4500 yen)

Reporting ​by Miho Uranaka; Writing by Anton Bridge

Source: Reuters


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