GLOBALCAPITAL INTERNATIONAL LIMITED, a company

incorporated in England and Wales (company number 15236213),

having its registered office at 4 Bouverie Street, London, UK, EC4Y 8AX

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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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  • Anglo-German travel and tourism group TUI has completed its heavily discounted €544m rights issue, which is part of a bailout of the company.
  • ION Analytics has returned to the market with a $1.9bn-equivalent loan package to fund the combination of Dealogic with Acuris. It tried to sell this deal before the US presidential election but pulled it in the face of weakening sentiment and concerns over political stability.
  • Hong Kong-listed Sun Hung Kai Properties has returned to the loan market for a HK$5bn ($645m) club deal. It is testing lender appetite at a time of growing selectiveness around the sector.
  • Chinese conglomerate Fosun International has cut pricing on a new $560m-equivalent multi-currency loan, as it counts on banks’ hunger to lend amid slow deal flow to push its transaction past the finish line.
  • SRI
    BlackRock wants to move a long way towards catching up with leading investors in its response to climate change, its CEO Larry Fink indicated in his annual letter to chief executives on Tuesday. BlackRock stopped short of setting a net zero carbon emissions target for its $8.7tr of assets under management, or committing to swift decarbonisation. But it did publish a ‘net zero commitment’ saying it would “support the goal of net zero emissions by 2050 or sooner”.
  • Direct lenders and debt funds have always pitched themselves as being more suitable partners for businesses than banks, bondholders, or other institutional lenders. When the going gets tough, they can be quicker to waive covenants and offer new money than a less concentrated creditor group. But this also puts them in pole position to take the keys from a business should things go wrong — which we may see happen this year.