Top Section/Ad
Top Section/Ad
Most recent
◆ Issuers opt for extra guidance as market softens ◆ Enexis takes size at six years ◆ DSM-Firmenich lands tight
This week's flurry of deals takes year to date volume beyond £8bn
Tech giant's meditation on permanence offered investors a juicy a pick-up for taking just a little more duration risk
Disney joins tech giant with first dollar deal in over five years
More articles/Ad
More articles/Ad
More articles
-
Enagás, the Spanish gas transmission and network company, came to the bond market for a rare trade on Tuesday, as European Central Bank bond buying continues to make syndicate bankers' lives difficult by taking spreads in strange directions.
-
Daa, the operator of two Irish airports, and Swedish telecoms company Tele2 have mandated for bonds, as the market goes into near-hibernation during corporate earnings blackouts.
-
Compagnie Générale des Etablissements Michelin, the French tyre company, won more than €10bn of demand for its €1.5bn bond issue on Monday. Now a growing number of corporate bankers expect to see European high grade spreads return to pre-Covid 19 levels.
-
A host of Chinese issuers found one of the last windows to sell bonds on Thursday ahead of the US presidential elections at the beginning of November and a public holiday in Hong Kong early next week.
-
A2A, the Italian multi-utility, pre-funded for 2021 with a €500m trade on Wednesday, getting what the lead manager said was the lowest yield for a deal of its type. The company is preparing a new business plan that will see it printing more green and sustainability-linked debt.
-
The secondary market in Schuldscheine is rudimentary, partly as the arranging banks have never wanted to encourage it. But a little known brokerage firm is quietly acting as a go-between, helped by its contacts with non-traditional investors, writes Silas Brown.