Top section
Top section
Hopes of a Lebanon debt restructuring creep higher
Lack of proper economic data means any debt talks will be arduous
The best things said in capital markets — and the most revealing
DP World sells MENA's first blue bond
ESG issuance has surged from the Middle East since its first appearance in 2017
Relief for UK water, but not for Thames, as Ofwat sets five year plan
Ailing Thames Water got little of what it asked for, Southern Water a modest lift
The best things said in capital markets — and the most revealing
Sub-sections
-
◆ Issuers add tier two debt amid lower relative cost to senior layer ◆ Danske Bank prints in euros at no premium as Nordea said to have garnered largest size locally ◆ BNPP, HSBC and Westpac target dollar market
-
◆ Bankers debate negative premium ◆ Spread could have been pushed further ◆ Fast money still interested in Greek names
-
Port is the first to sign a deal using the structure in Morocco
-
KfW first to return to the primary market with opportunistic sterling tap
-
◆ Société Générale prints dual-tranche senior ◆ Bankers agree on new issue premium ◆ Some question two year format
-
Raising long-term funding is not an 'imminent' need for the Swedish energy utility
-
Draft budget plans suggest a record year of international bond issuance
-
Buyers already thinking about what happens once sanctions are lifted but many hurdles remain
-
Steel firm tightens both tranches of its €1bn trade by 40bp
-
Deal structured as a Sharia-compliant tranched private securitization
-
◆ Donald Trump’s threat to ESG finance in the US ◆ Why ‘woke capitalism’ won’t be put to bed ◆ UK auto ABS faces up to compensation crisis
-
M&A refinancing wins more than €11bn of orders and tightens by 50bp
-
As Thames Water goes to court, UK regulator Ofwat’s final determination will be judged too
-
UK judge hears claims the company is being held to ransom in £3bn emergency funding dispute
-
Judge asked to consider alternative funding plan as investor calls grow for government intervention
-
With war raging on the continent, a shifting geopolitical landscape and a tenuous fiscal backdrop in several EU member states’ economies, the bloc’s supranational institutions — the darlings of the public sector bond market — face having to do more to fund its investment needs, as Elias Wilson reports
-
Excitement is brewing among Latin America debt capital markets bankers over the prospects for the region’s three largest bond markets. But there is also trepidation that any deviation in the path of US interest rates could derail their impressive recovery, writes Oliver West
-
Interest rate cuts mean spirits are high in the CEEMEA primary bond market after it recovered a semblance of normality in 2024. But Donald Trump’s election as the next US president has added uncertainty to the trajectory of interest rates, throwing borrowers and investors a curveball, write George Collard and Francesca Young
-
Decision on the refi will be made in first half of 2025 but new Eurobonds are 'unlikely'
-
Making bankers apply for their own jobs is a recipe for disruption
-
BBC claimed UK water company inflated its accounts by £1.7bn
-
Number of Riyadh listings has swollen as economy grows and liberalises
-
Acquisitive company also prints bonds following Valinor purchase
-
Better book than last sell-down with new long-only institutions coming into the stock while others add to positions
-
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 Instituto de Crédito Oficial
ICO: a benchmark issuer in the European sustainable bonds market