WASHINGTON, D.C. / Content Syndication Services / – The International Finance Corporation priced a $2 billion five-year US dollar green benchmark bond, opening its fiscal-year dollar funding with a deal tied to private-sector development and job creation in developing countries. IFC, a member of the World Bank Group, carries Aaa and AAA issuer ratings from Moody’s and S&P. The transaction priced on July 7, 2026, and is due to settle on July 14, 2026.

The bond drew an $8 billion order book from 120 investor orders. The final demand was four times the issue size. The five-year note carries a 4.25% semi-annual coupon and a re-offer yield of 4.252%. It priced at 99.991% and offered a spread of 1.7 basis points over the reference US Treasury. The maturity date is July 14, 2031.
Central banks and official institutions took the largest allocation, with 61% of the bond. Banks, bank treasuries and corporates received 21%. Asset managers, insurers and pension funds received 18%. By region, Europe, the Middle East and Africa accounted for 41% of investor distribution. The Americas took 31%, while Asia accounted for 28%.
Global demand anchors transaction
The issue marks IFC’s first US dollar-denominated green benchmark bond since 2017. It also represents the first bond under IFC’s updated Green Bond Framework, published in July 2026. S&P Global Ratings provided the second-party opinion for the framework. The review confirmed full alignment with the Green Bond Principles published by the International Capital Market Association.
Joint bookrunners on the transaction were BMO Capital Markets, Citigroup Global Markets Limited, Goldman Sachs International and J.P. Morgan. The bond will list on the Luxembourg Stock Exchange. IFC used its Global Medium-Term Note Program for the documentation. The transaction adds to IFC’s long-running access to the US dollar global bond market, where it has issued dollar-denominated global bonds each year since 2000.
Green proceeds target development
Proceeds from IFC green bonds support financing for eligible projects with environmental objectives. These include climate change mitigation, adaptation and resilience, biodiversity and nature, ocean and water protection, and the circular economy. The updated framework also identifies quality jobs, resilient livelihoods and inclusive economic participation as linked outcomes within climate-smart business. The structure keeps the bond within IFC’s green financing program.
IFC also issues thematic bonds and local-currency bonds to support its work in emerging markets. Its fiscal year runs from July 1 to June 30. The development institution works in more than 100 countries and focuses on private-sector activity in developing countries. Its financing targets private companies and financial institutions, with the stated aim of mobilizing private capital and supporting markets where access to long-term finance remains limited.
