Top Section/Ad
Top Section/Ad
Most recent
Investors saw plenty of juice in first public AT1 from Chile as regulatory framework draws praise
Mexican lender falls short of bond size target as late 2023 momentum fades
◆ US RMBS sales in Europe: immigration or vacation? ◆ UBS AT1 makes nonsense of claims of investor fears ◆ The EU's last hurrah in the SSA market
◆ IG investors comfort eat sweet spreads ◆ What can FIG issuers do now? ◆ US HEI securitizations: mainstream or flash in pan?
More articles/Ad
More articles/Ad
More articles
-
Lloyds Bank's shares rose 1.5% on Thursday after the Court of Appeal ruled a series of high coupon enhanced capital notes sold to retail investors in 2009 had become useless for future UK stress tests and could be called at par.
-
Earnings from capital market activities are expected to come under further pressure next year, as European banks struggle to make money in the new regulatory environment.
-
Deutsche Bank has suffered another rating agency downgrade, this time from Fitch, which said the German giant had fallen behind its universal banking peers in preparing for tougher regulation.
-
China Construction Bank (CCB) has launched what is most likely to be the last high profile bond of the year in Asia, opening books for a dollar-denominated additional tier one offering on December 9.
-
Santander UK has beaten a path that could be well trodden by European banks in the next two years, printing a holdco senior unsecured deal in the Tokyo Pro-Bond market as it looks to broaden its investor base for issuing loss absorbing debt.
-
Merchant banks in Singapore will soon have to come to grips with more stringent capital requirements following the Monetary Authority of Singapore’s (MAS) decision to impose Basel III liquidity rules on them.