Top Section/Ad
Top Section/Ad
Most recent
US issuers and insurance companies could benefit as Moody’s relaxes parts of its approach
Investors attracted by relative value versus loans but are not blind to risk
Floridian manager registered the vehicle in Ireland with article 8 SFDR classification
More articles/Ad
More articles/Ad
More articles
-
The Nordic high yield market has started to price several top rated euro deals that were initially planned to roadshow before the summer break. This time, demand and coupons suggest this could be a better window for the issuers.
-
A number of bond issuers ventured out to the debt market on Wednesday, braving a weak market backdrop to pull off deals not just in US dollars, but also in Singapore dollars and offshore renminbi.
-
The buyers of Thomson Reuters’ Financial & Risk business on Wednesday launched roadshows for $5.5bn equivalent of high yield bonds across two tenors and in dollars and euros, following the launch of $8bn of loans for the buyout on Tuesday.
-
European corporate bond investors have enjoyed the extra yield a bunch of new 12 year bonds have offered in the last two weeks, but are warning that issuers may need to find a new trick soon.
-
Bankers working on the European deal pipelines for high yield bonds and leveraged loans promise a blazing September, but the talk among investors and their advisers is sober. Some fund managers believe the second half of the year might turn out to be reckoning time from what they described as “excesses” of the past.
-
The US high yield bond market’s vulnerability to the price of oil is a perfect example of how heavy dependence on a single industry can hit a whole market. Now, the sterling bond market faces a similar test from the retail sector.