© 2026 GlobalCapital, Derivia Intelligence Limited, company number 15235970, 161 Farringdon Rd, London EC1R 3AL. All rights reserved.

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement | Event Participant Terms & Conditions | Cookies

Emerging Markets

Top section

Top section

◆ Outsiders open EM investors’ wallets ◆ European banks let their hair down in dollar market, still shy in euros ◆ Digital innovation in Frankfurt with DZ Bank
Issuer ends five year primary market hiatus with five year deal
Higher prices and concessions mean many issuers will wait for better days

Data

More articles

More articles

More articles

  • Taiwanese printed circuit board manufacturer Zhen Ding Technology Holding has closed a $250m loan with three participants.
  • Chinese company Gangfeng Lithium Co is gearing up to tap equity investors for as much as HK$4.9bn ($632m) from a private placement of its Hong Kong-listed shares, as it looks to raise money to expand some of its projects and investments.
  • Cheerwin Group, a Chinese company that makes personal and household care products, has thrown open its up to HK$3.1bn ($400m) Hong Kong IPO, testing investor appetite following a slump in the benchmark index this week over a planned increase in the stamp duty paid on stock trading.
  • El Salvador’s bonds retained recent gains on Thursday as EM’s riskiest credits proved resilient to the week’s US Treasury sell-off, with bondholders hoping that Sunday’s mid-term elections will give president Nayib Bukele the political capital he requires to implement an IMF programme.
  • Emerging market assets took a hit after several days of US rates volatility this week as market participants braced for further gyrations and issuers avoided raising dollar bonds. Market participants are praying that further central bank stimulus will pacify markets and believe that the asset class is far better prepared for higher rates than it was for the 2013 taper tantrum. Oliver West, Lewis McLellan and Mariam Meskin report.
  • SRI
    Banks and investors’ claims to be acting on climate change appear to clash with the financing they still provide in the real economy, research showed this week — such as plans to increase fossil fuel production and consumption, even in the UK and France.