Most recent/Bond comments/Ad
Most recent/Bond comments/Ad
Most recent
◆ Hyperscaler sets new standard for European corporate bond market ◆ What it will it take to get a bank to issue in euros again ◆ Iran war could reshape ultra-competitive Gulf capital markets
Conflict marks inflection point for investment banks as syndicated loan exposure and crushed bond fees come under scrutiny
Many bankers find reasons to leave the region
◆ How banks and bankers are operating in the region under threat of military escaltion ◆ Bond issuance to resume — but how? ◆ Dwindling fee pool poses questions over long-term future for banks
More articles/Ad
More articles/Ad
More articles
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The CEEMEA primary market turned a corner in 2024 after two dreadful years. Hopes of interest rate cuts fuelled demand, with investors wanting to lock in high coupons while they could. Market access returned for all but a few and although most deals went very well, some stood out more than others.
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Bond issuance from the CEEMEA region boomed in 2024, as investors made the most of high yields before interest rate cuts kicked in and keeping new issue premiums low. Meanwhile, a rejuvenated group from Turkey redrew the borrower map, writes George Collard
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Interest rate cuts mean spirits are high in the CEEMEA primary bond market after it recovered a semblance of normality in 2024. But Donald Trump’s election as the next US president has added uncertainty to the trajectory of interest rates, throwing borrowers and investors a curveball, write George Collard and Francesca Young
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Observers disagreed on the revolution's potential impact on Turkey and other neighbours
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Deal got done with local institutions and finished 2.1 times oversubscribed. International and retail accounts were irked by E&P’s share price tumble
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Internationally marketed IPO pays off as ‘global’ investors come in