© 2026 GlobalCapital, Derivia Intelligence Limited, company number 15235970, 4 Bouverie Street, London, EC4Y 8AX. Part of the Delinian group. All rights reserved.

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement | Event Participant Terms & Conditions | Cookies

High grade and crossover bonds

Top Section/Ad

Top Section/Ad

Most recent


◆ Deal spans euros, sterling and dollars ◆ Wide range of US TMT comps used ◆ Slim premiums needed for euro tranches
◆ Telecoms firm takes €1.5bn ◆ Some premium needed at the long end ◆ Demand highest for shortest tranche
◆ Japanese firm guides debut euro deal tight ◆ Endeavour attracts strong demand ◆ Sales follow multi-day marketing exercises
Geopolitics takes a back seat as earnings season weighs on euro corporate supply
More articles/Ad

More articles/Ad

More articles

  • The rise of the Covid-19 coronavirus in Italy has tapped the brakes on the zooming high grade corporate bond primary market. Concerns over the spread of the illness have sent corporate spreads wider and rates tighter.
  • Three Chinese issuers visited the dollar bond market on Thursday, raising $1.2bn between them.
  • HSBC’s corporate finance staff have survived its restructuring largely unscathed, but the more ambitious among them will see the bank’s plans as a missed opportunity, writes David Rothnie. And with no answer yet on the identity of the next full-time CEO, the uncertainty is not over.
  • UK water utility companies have begun to test public and private debt markets for the first time since regulator Ofwat’s price review, and the deadline to appeal it, passed. The regulator’s decision will have large ramifications for the companies’ profiles in capital markets, writes Silas Brown.
  • US bond market tourists poured into high grade euros this week, where tiny concessions and a cheap overall cost of funding saw a string of successful trades.
  • Cadent Gas, the UK gas distribution network spun off by National Grid in 2017, will roadshow from Tuesday next week for a €500m transition bond. The deal is likely to delight green bond specialists who have championed the idea of transition bonds as a way to finance companies that are not green, but are moving towards lower carbon business models.