Top Section/Ad
Top Section/Ad
Most recent
Long seen as adversaries, banks and private credit lenders are getting used to working together
Fahy will also lead asset-based finance origination
Direct lending default rates tick higher amid notable distressed situations
A Swiss borrower has already closed books and Austria's Egger will soon
More articles/Ad
More articles/Ad
More articles
-
Once Schuldschein market darlings, auto parts suppliers are beginning to look to lenders like they may be in distress. Some fear a wave of credit restructurings on the horizon, when the market's lean documentation standards are likely to be tested.
-
After a period of quiet, the Schuldschein market is creaking back into life. At least four international companies have entered the market in the past week on the hunt for new debt.
-
Top tier UK universities are likely to issue public and private debt in the fourth quarter of this year, to fill a funding gap from collapsing summer revenues and dwindling numbers of international students. With operating conditions for the sector decidedly bleaker, many expect a clutch of lower ranked UK universities to go bust in the next few years.
-
The Monks Investment Trust, the UK listed investment trust managed by Baillie Gifford, has sold £100m of US private placements.
-
Any investor in a market as international and broad as the Schuldschein deserves a healthy secondary market. This is emerging, but certain market grandees are resistant. They should embrace it.
-
UK housing provider Settle Group has raised £75m of private placements to institutional investors. For many investors, the housing sector is one of the few that has continued to provide opportunities throughout the crisis.