clear

Creating new perspectives since 2009

Israel raises $6 billion in first international bond offer since ceasefire

January 8, 2026 at 2:42 pm

Israeli shekels. [Christopher Furlong/Getty Images]

Israel sold $6 billion of bonds in a three tranche international debt offering, the Finance Ministry said on Wednesday, taking advantage of a positive market environment and Israel’s improved fiscal position since the October 10 ceasefire in Gaza, Reuters reported.

The ministry said demand totalled $36 billion, reflecting strong confidence among international investors in Tuesday’s offering of 5-, 10- and 30-year bonds, with spreads between 90 and 125 basis points over comparable US Treasuries yields.

“This issuance … reflects the State of Israel’s ability to operate successfully even under conditions of uncertainty,” said Yali Rothenberg, Israel’s Accountant General.

“The size of the issuance supports Israel’s financing needs for 2026 and provides significant tailwinds for the local market as well,” Rothenberg added in a statement.

Spreads returned to pre-war levels in the offering, which attracted some 300 investors in 30 countries, including those with which Israel has signed the Abraham Accords, showing “the expansion and deepening” of its international investor base”.

READ: Israel seizes 149 million shekels from Palestinian Authority funds

The Gaza genocide began in October 2023. While the ceasefire has halted most fighting, it has not stopped entirely.

About 15 per cent of Israel’s financing needs come from annual foreign bond issues, with 85 per cent in the domestic market. It sold $5 billion in bonds in 2025.

In the wake of 2024 downgrades from all three major credit rating agencies, Israel last February sold $2.5 billion of five-year bonds at 120 basis points over comparable U.S. Treasury yields and $2.5 billion of 10-year bonds at 135 bps over. It sold $8 billion in 2024 at as much as 145 bps over Treasuries.

Israel’s economy grew by about 2.8 per cent in 2025 and the Bank of Israel projects a 5.2 per cent rise in 2026. S&P in November raised the country’s outlook to “stable” from “negative”, while Israel’s shekel is at a four-year peak against the dollar.

Rothenberg told Reuters on Tuesday that the time was ripe for an offering given typically strong investor demand in January, along with the fact that spreads have narrowed and easing global inflation has led to lower interest rates.

Bank of America, Citi, Deutsche Bank, Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan were joint lead managers on the offering.

READ: Iran warns it may launch pre-emptive strike against Israel