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
-
Investors appear to be allocating more cash to buying leveraged loans and high yield bonds.
-
Investment grade corporate market participants are all aware that the European Central Bank’s bond buying programme will come to an end in 2018. The pace of that buying slowed in April, but the cash that investors are holding is proving to be an easy replacement for the central bank’s support.
-
China Aoyuan Property Group, Hydoo International Holding and Indonesia’s Federal International Finance wasted no time in hitting the bond market on Wednesday after the Labour Day holiday.
-
High yield notes sold by co-working space company WeWork dropped in four straight days of secondary trading after they were sold last Wednesday, less than a week after buyers piled into the offering in an apparent vote of confidence for cash burning companies.
-
Despite expectations of a slowdown in the pace of issuance in the European high yield market, two borrowers brought €2.9bn of new bonds this week. Both issuers, Spanish construction firm Aldesa and Italian banking payments group Nexi, marketed refinancing deals.
-
The pace of loan refinancing and repricing eased in the first quarter of 2018, according to a quarterly update from Fitch Ratings. Some investors expect this trend to continue as companies look to dodge rising rates by refinancing loans in the fixed rate bond market.