Most recent/Bond comments/Ad
Most recent/Bond comments/Ad
Most recent
The bank's regular appearances in primary markets stopped after Russia invaded Ukraine
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
More articles/Ad
More articles/Ad
More articles
-
Vakifbank will be the next borrower to join the growing list of Turkish credits returning to the bond market after the nation’s currency crisis in 2018.
-
A flurry of Russian equity capital markets transactions have hit the market in the past fortnight, with three block trades priced and one IPO launched. After almost no Russian issuance since April 2018, many investors are keen to gain exposure to the country and sellers are taking advantage of a clear window before political volatility returns.
-
Fear of US sanctions kept Russian borrowers out of the market for much of 2018. Now they’re coming back, and investors would be well advised to get involved.
-
Roman Abramovich let a consortium of three Russia oligarchs in a £151m selldown of shares in Evraz, the London-listed Russian steel and mining company on Monday night.
-
The Republic of Turkey is returning to the bond markets for the fourth time this year with a dollar tap of the $2bn 7.625% 2029s it sold in January, continuing to front load for its $8bn 2019 funding target.
-
Slovak Vseobecna uverova banka (VUB) attracted a €2.5bn orderbook from 160 mostly new investors on Tuesday for its first benchmark covered bond and the debut benchmark from Slovakia. The deal sends a strong signal to other borrowers across Central and Eastern Europe, where several banks are lining up with debut benchmarks of their own.