BNP Paribas
-
BNP Paribas is hoping to win more business from private equity firms across its product lines, following the appointment of James Seagrave as global head of financial sponsors.
-
Barcelona-based real estate company Inmobiliaria Colonial on Friday sold its new eight year bond to repay the four year tranche of its debut bond maturing in 2019.
-
World Bank has reopened the 10 year part of the dollar curve, with other public sector issuers keen to follow it into the tenor.
-
-
The debut covered bond of BNP Paribas Fortis and the first in four years from SNS Bank were priced on Monday with virtually no new issue concessions and healthy levels of subscription.
-
Poland cemented its position as one of CEE’s most nimble and savvy issuers on Tuesday by printing a 30 year euro deal — only the second ever from a non-Eurozone sovereign — in an opportunistic trade.
-
Valmet — Segro — Ecom — Aluminium Bahrain — Morpho
-
The World Bank is set to price the largest 10 year dollar benchmark from an SSA since July, as another issuer considered following the supranational into that part of the curve.
-
Two french firms, digital services specialist Econocom Group and research company Ipsos, have both launched Schuldscheine this week with initial sizes of €125m that can be increased.
-
BNP Paribas has promoted one of its rising stars, underlining a new determination at the bank to translate its supremacy in the corporate banking sector into success across all of its investment banking products, writes David Rothnie.
-
Industrial and Commercial Bank of China’s New York branch was forced to scrap a 10 year portion of a dual tranche bond on Monday because of a disagreement with investors over what it should pay. But all was not lost, as the issuer decided to make the most of the demand for the shorter tenor, taking home $1bn in the end, writes Addison Gong.
-
Rallye, the French listed holding company that controls supermarket group Casino, on Wednesday became the first issuer to use an equity-neutral structure on an exchangeable bond, rather than a convertible.