Most recent/Bond comments/Ad
Most recent/Bond comments/Ad
Most recent
Japanese government bond yields have risen during the last few months
BSTDB has had a tricky time since Russia attacked Ukraine, both of which are shareholders
Demand peaked at six times the deal size, but many orders dropped out
The Ukrainian company's January deal performed well on secondary
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International banks should stand their ground and continue lending to Russian borrowers. The weak, ineffective sanctions that the US rolled out last week have not affected Russia’s creditworthiness and some even argue that investors in the country face fewer risks than they did two weeks ago.
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Poland's Bank Pekao is planning to tap the Eurobond market for the first time in 2020, in order to set down a senior benchmark for the subsequent issuance of capital ratio raising bonds, according to Pawel Rzezniczak, head of investor relations and corporate development at the bank.
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Bankers and investors have expressed their irritation at the US's new set of sanctions on Russia. The latest punitive actions stop US financial institutions from extending debt financing in the primary market to the sovereign.
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With emerging market loan bankers puzzling over what the latest round of US sanctions against Russia mean for syndicated lending in the country — an activity already well muzzled by proscriptions — Moscow bankers were defiant that they would be ineffective.
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The US Treasury's fresh round of sanctions on Russian sovereign debt has thrown yet another obstacle in the way of international lenders, who are bracing themselves for indirect impact on the already faltering syndicated loans market.
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Emerging market loan bankers have been trying to understand the impact on syndicated lending of the US’s latest sanctions on Russia. The proscriptions have instilled more uncertainty into a collapsing market.