In a sign of renewed investor confidence, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (GS) on Thursday offered $2 billion in 10-year notes without government backing and nonfinancial investment-grade firms sought to raise more than $8 billion in bond deals.

Goldman Sachs and other financial institutions have sold billions of short-term bonds at cheap rates through the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.'s Temporary Liquidity Guarantee Program. The program was aimed at helping banks and finance units, beaten down by investor suspicion, to refinance debt and boost their capital positions. Goldman sold $14.5 billion in notes under the program, which is guaranteeing a total of $156 billion, according to data provider Dealogic.

And financials largely avoided selling unguaranteed debt in great numbers, until Thursday. Besides General Electric Capital Corp.'s $4 billion deal Jan. 6, only $109 million of debt had been issued by financials with no government backing since then, according to Dealogic.

"The successful placement of unguaranteed, unsecured financial debt is a critical signpost pointing to further thawing in the credit markets," said Jon Duensing, principal at Smith Breeden Associates.

Banks have until June 30 to issue debt under the FDIC program, which guarantees it until June 30, 2012. Goldman Sachs may have been asked by the government to test the market for unguaranteed financial debt to see how much the backing would be worth if extended to 10 years, bond investors said.

A Goldman Sachs spokesman declined to provide any details on the transaction.

One of the investors characterized the spread or risk premium of the new Goldman note, launched at 500 basis points over Treasury yields, as 30 to 50 basis points over existing Goldman debt.

The spread on an existing 10-year Goldman note, a 6.15% issue due April 2018, is 459 basis points on 13 trades, according to online trading platform MarketAxess.

Meanwhile, investors flocked to bonds from nonfinancial companies as well. Deals were oversubscribed and were seen offering spreads at the lower end of expected ranges, showing investors were happy to take less return to own the new bonds.

The largest deal so far is a $6 billion three-part offering from oil producer ConocoPhillips (COP).

Other deals included $1.25 billion from Hess Corp. (HES) and $1.15 billion from General Mills Inc. (GIS). AT&T Inc. (T) offered a three-part deal expected to be in the billions.

A combination of factors - such as government programs kicking in, a possible "bad bank" scenario and built-up cash sitting on the sidelines - has caused a sharp rally in the high-grade corporate bond market, said Lindsey Spink, investment-grade trader at AXA Investment Managers in Greenwich, Conn. Also, "many people have perceived credit as the cheapest asset class for 2009, with stock market volatility," he said.

Indeed, funds that had been inactive in high-grade corporate bonds for a couple of years because of their interest in other fixed-income assets, have come back to the market, said one syndicate official, who declined to be named.

"Receptivity by investors around issuance is very similar to periods before the credit crisis began and periods when there was stability," such as the first five months of 2008, said Tom Lewis, head of U.S. investment-grade syndicate at Morgan Stanley (MS).

-By Romy Varghese, Dow Jones Newswires; 201-938-4287; romy.varghese@dowjones.com

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