Sony Group Corp. announced on Monday it has mandated Bank of America Corp. and Morgan Stanley to arrange investor calls for an upcoming U.S. dollar-denominated bond offering. The move marks the Japanese technology and entertainment giant’s first return to the U.S. investment-grade bond market in nearly three decades.
According to a Securities and Exchange Commission filing, Sony plans to issue a two-tranche note offering with maturities of five and ten years. The Tokyo-based company disclosed that the net proceeds from the debt sale will be allocated toward general corporate purposes, though specific financial targets for the sale have not yet been made public.
The transaction represents Sony’s first major U.S. dollar bond sale since 1998, when the corporation raised $1.5 billion. Financial analysts note that Japanese firms are increasingly accessing foreign capital markets to lock in tight credit spreads. This strategic shift follows policy tightening by the Bank of Japan, which recently pushed its benchmark interest rate to its highest level since 1995, making domestic debt issuance less advantageous. Investor calls commenced on Monday afternoon, with institutional bidding expected to open later this week depending on market conditions.



