Goldman Sachs
-
Corporate bond investors had another chance to pick up some spread on Tuesday after August had closed with a flurry of hybrids, with crossover trades from French nuclear power company Orano and Italian electricity company Enel.
-
The European Stability Mechanism (ESM) is returning to the dollar market for its fourth dollar benchmark, two weeks ahead of its scheduled funding window.
-
Erste Group Bank kept the tap open on subordinated supply in the euro market this week with a €500m 11-year non-call six deal.
-
Property manager China Resources Mixc Lifestyle Services is planning an IPO on Hong Kong’s stock exchange, getting the ball rolling with an application to the bourse this week.
-
Hong Kong property developer Nan Fung International Holdings returned to the market with a $500m fixed-for-life perpetual bond in a bid to manage its liabilities and score lower interest rate for its debt.
-
Yum China Holdings, a fast food restaurant franchiser, launched the roadshow for its secondary listing in Hong Kong on Monday to strong early momentum from investors.
-
Antengene Corp, a clinical stage biopharmaceutical company, has set the ball rolling for a Hong Kong IPO, adding to a bulging pipeline of healthcare firms targeting the city’s bourse.
-
The dollar corporate bond market skipped the summer slowdown this year. This week Royalty Pharma issued its first bond as a public company and pushed August's total issuance above $100bn for the first time ever.
-
Companies piled into the bond market with hybrid capital issues this week to raise €4.95bn between them, as syndicate bankers say that they are encouraging as many borrowers as possible to consider pushing out higher risk trades before raising senior debt.
-
-
-
Public sector borrowers found themselves in a tricky position as they returned to the primary euro market this week as they attempted to strike a balance between current secondary levels and where the market is heading with the arrival of the European Union’s giant borrowing programme from September.