Most recent/Bond comments/Ad
Most recent/Bond comments/Ad
Most recent
Development bank's credit ratings suffered a blow after Russia's invasion of Ukraine
Books were nearly three times the issue size
◆ Higher rated Austrian lender offers more spread for similar senior preferred bond ◆ Big demand pushes deal inside fair value ◆ BCP still prints its tightest unsecured debt for more than five years
After a record 2024, Turkish corporate issuance slowed last year
More articles/Ad
More articles/Ad
More articles
-
Georgian Railway and Togo-headquartered Ecobank Transnational launched a green bond and a sustainability-linked bond, respectively, on Thursday.
-
Russian potash fertiliser producer Uralkali has entered the syndicated loan market to raise a pre-export finance facility, according to loan bankers. The facility garnered a strong response from lenders, as they hunt for assets in a bare pipeline.
-
Russian gold miner Nord Gold said on Thursday that it wants to launch an IPO on the London Stock Exchange, following a rally in the price of gold since March.
-
Turkey’s credit metrics took another hit this week after contradictory statements on interest rates from president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and central bank governor Şahap Kavcıoğlu. Market participants said the environment for foreign investors is rocky, and any new sovereign Eurobond would have to offer a "big premium".
-
Hungarian Development Bank is set to return to bond markets as it seeks €500m of funding, a year after it last raised international debt.
-
Belarus this week gave investors a chance to demonstrate the ESG credentials they are often so keen to trumpet. Few took it. Although the country’s sovereign bonds sold off in the wake of the controversial arrest of a journalist on Sunday, investors gave a number of reasons why issues such as human rights violations were no deterrent to buying an issuer’s bonds. But there are signs those excuses may not hold up for ever, writes Mariam Meskin.