Top section
Top section
◆ Running a bond business in a crisis ◆ Bank issuers find their way back into the bond market ◆ Can frontier emerging market sovereigns fund themselves?
Markets may not be shut for too long, and African sovereigns have managed debt well
Sovereign pays at least 25bp of concession but points to healthy demand after broader spread widening
More articles
More articles
More articles
-
◆ How to fund Europe ◆ What market experts think is going to happen next ◆ The EU to embark on biggest six-month funding spree
-
Who’s top in covered bonds? Who leads the way in SSAs? Who’s first in FIG? Who’s an emerging force in EM? Or who’s closing in on corporates? GlobalCapital has sifted through the data and analysed the performance of leading bookrunners over the past two years. Frank Jackman reports
-
Investors hope for cash inflows but no sign yet
-
Draft budget plans suggest a record year of international bond issuance
-
The CEEMEA primary market turned a corner in 2024 after two dreadful years. Hopes of interest rate cuts fuelled demand, with investors wanting to lock in high coupons while they could. Market access returned for all but a few and although most deals went very well, some stood out more than others.
-
Bond issuance from the CEEMEA region boomed in 2024, as investors made the most of high yields before interest rate cuts kicked in and keeping new issue premiums low. Meanwhile, a rejuvenated group from Turkey redrew the borrower map, writes George Collard
Sub-sections
-
Sponsored by CAF – Development Bank of Latin America and the Caribbean
CAF gearing up to transform regional development
-
Sponsored by Emirates NBD Capital
Emirates NBD Capital: An unrivalled conduit for Middle East liquidity
-
-
Sponsored by European Investment Bank
European Investment Bank: Supporting sustainable development in North Africa