Top Section/Ad
Top Section/Ad
Most recent
Embattled utility makes final plea for court to sanction £3bn in emergency funding
Thames Water refinancing battle is an unedifying mess
Embattled utility asks judge to approve £3bn lifeline as creditor groups keep fighting
High yield issuers may be worried about market access, but some do not see them losing it
More articles/Ad
More articles/Ad
More articles
-
GlobalCapital has made the difficult but hopefully understandable decision to postpone our 2020 Bond Awards, but we are now relaunching them today.
-
Chinese property borrowers are back in the bond market, following the success of Zhenro Properties Groups’ $200m deal last week. But Tuesday’s issuers — Country Garden Holdings Co and Redco Properties Group — saw two different outcomes, as they grappled with an illiquid secondary market and difficult pricing levels.
-
The slowly reopening European high yield market faced another test on Tuesday, following Sappi’s decision to pull its planned issue at the end of last week. Data centre and cable network firm Cogent was raising an B3/B- rated add-on in order to pay a dividend. The company is too leveraged already to allow a dividend under its existing bond docs but is using a "temporary deleveraging" and escrow structure to work around them.
-
Chinese investment banks have a clear edge over their global counterparts when it comes to winning more offshore bond mandates from the country in the post Covid-19 environment.
-
JP Morgan announced a new set of leaders for its underwriting, coverage and M&A business on Monday, following a series of promotions in February.
-
Sappi, the South African pulp and paper company, decided just before lunchtime on Friday to cancel a €250m bond issue, judging the price it would have had to pay too high. The failure of this deal contrasts with the vigorous issuance by much riskier companies in the US market.