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Denominated in €, $, £, Fr. Our current spotlight is on the universe of bonds denominated in Euros, US Dollars, British Pounds, and Swiss Francs.
Favorable risk-to-return ratio. In our assessment, the bonds highlighted present tolerable credit risk while offering yields that stand out compared to bank deposits and other bonds.
Accessible Investment Sizes. The bonds are available for trading in smaller, more manageable lots of up to 1,000 EUR or equivalent.
Market Liquidity. We prioritize bonds that are widely accessible through numerous brokers and exhibit active trading with consistent bid and ask quotes.
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To calculate yield after tax, we need to know your country of tax residence:
This feature is currently supported only for residents of:
If you are a resident of Italy, please update your country in your User Profile settings.
The format we use to display the name of a bond is as follows: “Issuer Name”, “Current Coupon Rate”, “Maturity Date (mm-yyyy)”.
The return you would get if you bought at a given price and held to maturity, expressed on an annualised basis. If the bond has embedded options (i.e. put or call options), the yield is calculated to the worst possible outcome for you.
The difference in before-tax return between an investment in a bond and an investment in a bank deposit, both with the same maturity and in the same currency, assuming the bond is held to maturity. The benchmark deposit rate used for comparison depends on the currency of the bond and is derived from fixed-term deposits available in the following countries:
For the benchmark deposit rate, we use indicative bank deposit rates from central banks. When central bank statistics are significantly delayed, we rely on actual deposit rates from leading banks within the selected country where possible.
The best available clean price at which a bond can be bought.
The term 'firm price' refers to the price that closely approximates the ask price seen from brokers known to us who trade the bond. It is calculated as the average of the best ask prices at market close on the most recent trading day, from the most liquid exchanges where the bond was actively traded. Selecting this option enhances your confidence in matching the price when accessing your broker's application
Proceeds from the bond issue are used to finance environmentally friendly projects, such as reducing carbon emissions or mitigating the effects of climate change
When this option is selected, the screener excludes Subordinated and Senior non-preferred bonds.These bonds rank lower in the repayment order and carry higher risk.
Only Senior and Secured bonds remain visible, which generally have higher priority in case of issuer default.
When this option is selected, the screener excludes bonds that do not pay regular interest. Only bonds with periodic coupon payments remain visible.
Zero-coupon bonds are issued at a discount and repay their full face value at maturity. The investor’s return comes from the difference between the purchase price and the redemption amount.
Example: A 5-year zero-coupon bond bought for €800 and redeemed at €1,000 will generate €200 of income at maturity. This corresponds to an annualized return of approximately 5%: (€1,000 – €800) / €800 / 5
The estimated annualised return if you bought the bond at the current market price and held it to maturity, after applying the applicable tax rate.
Formula:
Yield after tax = Yield × (1 − applicable tax rate)
The tax rate is determined by the country of tax residence selected in your user settings.
In jurisdictions where multiple tax rates apply (e.g. preferential rates for certain bond types), the relevant rate is applied. If a bond benefits from a lower tax rate than the standard base rate, the after-tax yield is highlighted in green.
Important:
This calculation is indicative and based on general assumptions. Individual tax circumstances may differ. Bondfish does not provide tax advice and cannot account for all personal factors. Please consult a qualified tax advisor before making investment decisions.
When enabled, the Yield column displays the estimated yield after tax instead of the gross yield.
Formula:
Yield after tax = Yield × (1 − applicable tax rate)
The applicable tax rate is determined by the country of residence selected in your user settings.
In certain jurisdictions (e.g. Italy), tax rates may vary depending on the bond type. Where relevant, the appropriate rate is applied. If a bond benefits from a tax rate lower than the standard default for that country, the after-tax yield is highlighted in green.
Important:
This calculation is indicative and based on general assumptions. Individual tax circumstances may differ. Bondfish does not provide tax advice and cannot account for all personal factors. Please consult a qualified tax advisor before making investment decisions.
Eligible for 12.5% tax rate:
The time to maturity of a bond from today, expressed in years.
An assessment of a borrower's creditworthiness, or the likelihood that the borrower will pay its debts and not go bankrupt.
Credit risk level is based on the average publicly available credit ratings of the issuer and its bonds assigned by the major rating agencies: S&P, Moody’s, and Fitch.
An assessment of a borrower's creditworthiness, or the likelihood that the borrower will pay its debts and not go bankrupt.
We calculate the average publicly available bond and borrower credit rating assigned by global rating agencies and present it on a five-point scale with the following meaning:
The country in which a borrower's main business is located, either in terms of assets or sources of income.
The high-level type of industry in which the borrower of a bond operates.
Brokers and banks known to us that allow you to trade the bond you are looking at on their platform.
The minimum tradable amount for a bond, expressed in the bond’s currency. This is not relevant if the broker allows you to trade fractions of bonds (Trade Republic is an example).
International Securities Identification Number (ISIN) is a globally recognized unique identifier for a security. Click on it to copy it to the clipboard and look it up with your broker.
We offer two different types of pricing data, both calculated in-house: 'firm price' and 'indicative price'.
The 'firm price' is based on the lowest ask price from the previous day’s trading session taken from the exchanges listed below and adjusted for the liquidity level of the venue specific to the instrument.
Exchanges used to calculate the 'firm price':
The 'indicative price' is generated by our unique pricing model, which aggregates data from multiple sources to estimate a value for the instrument on the last trading day. This model incorporates multi-factor analysis, taking into account aspects such as trading volume at relevant venues, randomised factors and a pre-defined maximum variance.
Please note that the pricing data provided by Bondfish is proprietary and may not be redistributed without explicit permission.
The classification of a bond that indicates the order of priority for repayment in the event of the issuer's bankruptcy:
A bond is considered liquid if, based on data from our partner brokers:
Shows bonds with a purchase price below 100 (below face value).
If you buy a bond below 100 and hold it until maturity, it is usually repaid at 100.
The difference is a capital gain.
Example:
Buy at 95, receive 100 at maturity → +5 capital gain.
In some countries, capital gains can be used to offset previously realized investment losses.
Example:
An investor previously sold shares with a loss of 5.
He buys a bond at 95 and holds it to maturity.
The +5 capital gain can offset the earlier −5 loss, so no tax is paid on the gain.
This improves the net return.

Over the past week, Oracle has become one of the most discussed names in credit markets following Barclays’ decision to downgrade its debt. The call highlighted mounting concerns about funding needs and the sustainability of the company’s investment cycle. Market reactions were swift, with spreads widening across key maturities. Could this downgrade turn out to be the first sign of a broader shift in how tech-sector credit is evaluated?
Barclays’ fixed-income research team downgraded Oracle's debt rating to “Underweight” (equivalent to a “Sell” recommendation) last week, flagging that the company’s heavy AI-related capital spending has outpaced free cash flow and materially worsened its leverage and liquidity profile. Analyst Andrew Keches also warned that Oracle could ultimately fall to a BBB- rating, nearing the threshold for junk bonds.

Barclays’ analysis pointed to an already large gross debt stock (reported roughly $104 billion, including about $18 billion of public bonds) and said an additional planned borrowing program (reported as roughly $38 billion) to fund data-centre and AI projects would stretch financing needs further. Barclays’ stress testing - cited in analyst notes summarising the downgrade - estimated a material funding gap emerging in fiscal 2027 and warned cash buffers could be meaningfully depleted under some scenarios.
Markets re-priced Oracle’s credit risk quickly after the note and ensuing press coverage. Secondary trading showed a 2-3 bps widening in yields on key benchmark lines (for example, the 4.9% 2033 bond and newer 4.8% 2032 bond), and Oracle’s credit-default-swaps (CDS) jumped to their highest readings in roughly two years: five-year CDS were reported in the 80-85 bps area.
This downgrade and price action should be read in the broader context. News outlets and strategists have documented a wave of large debt issuance across major cloud players as they finance capacity for generative AI. Credit strategists note that while the hyperscalers still show large cash piles and long-term revenue backlogs, the pace of CAPEX and the resulting increase in leverage have forced markets to separate companies by balance-sheet resilience.
Oracle has been singled out because its free-cash-flow profile has been negative while its net adjusted debt projection scenarios show steep increases. It’s still unclear whether Oracle’s AI contracts and revenue pipeline will quickly convert to the cash flow needed to service materially higher debt, and how rating agencies will react if leverage fails to stabilise. The result in the near term will be wider spreads and more volatile mark-to-market valuations on Oracle’s outstanding bonds.

