OREANDA-NEWS. Fitch Ratings has assigned Laender 51's EUR1bn 0.1% fixed-rate bonds (DE000A2BN5X6), due 7 October 2026, a final 'AAA' Long-Term rating. The bonds were issued by a group of five German federated states (Laender). This is the 51st joint issue of the German Laender and the 39th to be rated by Fitch.

The final rating follows the receipt of final documents conforming to information already received.

KEY RATING DRIVERS

The final rating reflects the strong support mechanisms that apply to all members of the German Federation, including the five German federated states involved in the joint issue, and the extensive liquidity facilities they benefit from, which ensure timely debt and debt service payment.

The support mechanism apply uniformly to all members of the German Federation: the Federal Republic of Germany (AAA/Stable) represented by the federal government (Bund) and the 16 federated states, which include the five states undertaking the issue: Bremen, Hamburg, Rheinland-Pfalz, Saarland and Schleswig-Holstein. All Laender are equally entitled to financial support in the event of financial distress irrespective of differences in economic and financial performances.

Each state is liable for its individual share in the issue, the proceeds of which will be divided between the participating states as follows:

State of Bremen: EUR200m

State of Hamburg: EUR200m

State of Rheinland-Pfalz: EUR200m

State of Saarland: EUR200m

State of Schleswig-Holstein: EUR200m

The State of Rheinland-Pfalz is the paying agent. The issue's liquidity is underpinned by the safe cash management system the Laender operate in, which allows overnight cash exchanges between Laender and the Bund when necessary, and recourse to appropriate short-term credit lines. The issue is zero risk-weighted and European Central Bank repo-eligible.

The objective of the Laender's jumbo joint issue is to offer investors a sizeable and liquid bond with portfolio exposure to several issuers.

RATING SENSITIVITIES

Negative rating action would be triggered by a change in Germany's sovereign ratings. Any change in the support scheme would result in a review of the rating.