Eng
Bond screener Top picks Prices News About us
Help us personalize your Bondfish experience
To make your bond exploration seamless and ensure our recommendations deliver maximum value, please answer 3 quick questions:
This will take less than a minute and helps us tailor the platform to your needs.
Show All
A gender bond is a sustainable bond whose proceeds are used to finance projects that support gender equality and women’s empowerment, such as funding women-owned businesses, improving access to services for women, or promoting equal opportunities in the workplace.
Gold bond is a bond whose value or repayment is linked to the price of gold rather than being fixed only in nominal currency terms. It allows investors to gain exposure to gold through a fixed income instrument, usually without owning or storing physical bullion.
A government bond is a debt security issued by a national government to raise money from investors. The government usually pays interest over the life of the bond and repays the principal at maturity. Government bonds are commonly used by investors seeking relatively lower-risk income, portfolio stability, and exposure to sovereign credit.
A green bond is a fixed income instrument whose proceeds are used to finance or refinance projects with environmental benefits, such as renewable energy, energy efficiency, clean transportation, pollution prevention, or climate change mitigation. For investors, green bonds work similarly to traditional bonds, but include additional reporting on how the funds are allocated and what environmental impact the financed projects are expected to achieve.
Green securitization is a type of securitisation where the issued securities are backed by cash flows from environmentally related assets or loans, or where the proceeds are allocated to finance eligible green projects. It enables the aggregation of smaller sustainable assets, such as green mortgages or renewable energy loans, into investable securities for capital markets investors, while requiring defined sustainability criteria, disclosure, and ongoing impact monitoring.
A guaranteed bond is a bond whose interest and principal payments are supported by a third-party guarantor, such as a parent company, government authority, or insurance company. If the issuer cannot meet its payment obligations, the guarantor is expected to step in and make the required payments, giving investors an additional layer of credit protection.
A guarantor is a person, company, parent entity, financial institution, or government body that agrees to meet a borrower’s debt obligations if the borrower fails to pay. In bond markets, a guarantor can improve investor protection by providing an additional source of repayment for interest, principal, or other amounts covered by the guarantee.