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Resets and refis prominent in pipeline as loan market softens, offering respite from repricing wave
The leading deals and organisations of 2024, as voted by the market, were crowned at a gala dinner in London
With private equity plateauing and private credit booming, banks are anxious not to get left out of the party
As Ares raises the largest direct lending fund, Goldman Sachs reorganises to serve the trend
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Is finance about to break out of the cocoon in which it has pupated for decades, and become a completely different life form?
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The European Commission signalled this week that it would extend regulation into many more aspects of sustainable finance, driving an agenda that could change the role of capital markets in society. But although responsible investing experts welcomed it, the complex package of at least 30 measures is likely to provoke a wide variety of reactions, from enthusiastic support to complaints that it is too slow and unambitious, to outright opposition. Jon Hay reports.
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With private equity-backed mergers and acquisitions hitting record levels in Europe, bankers have their tails up as they jostle for the most lucrative fee opportunities, writes David Rothnie.
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Several Schuldschein issuers have more than tripled their initial targets for deals, with arrangers saying many have gone subject just days after launch. The deal outcomes show a chronic supply and demand imbalance, as the market comes to terms with a persistent drop in deal flow.
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Oriental Petrochemical (Taiwan) Co, a subsidiary of conglomerate Far Eastern Group, is planning a return to the loan market for a dual currency borrowing that will include a dollar portion for the first time.
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The European Commission launched on Tuesday a second big wave of regulation that will soon be controlling more aspects of sustainable finance more tightly. There is a tendency to think anything with the word “sustainable” attached to it is good. But capital markets specialists must ask themselves: will the regulations be helpful?