Top section
Top section
Deal rules and slow primary market make ramping up deals difficult
◆ Supranationals and agencies prepare to achieve the previously unthinkable ◆ Leveraged loans versus private credit and their effect on CLOs ◆ A new dawn for dollar covered bonds and UK equity market structure
◆ Schaeffler attracts €5.8bn peak book… ◆ …while SPIE finds €2.8bn of orders ◆ Strong demand allows for strong price moves
More articles
More articles
More articles
-
The central bank of Laos is seeking a $100m loan through Taipei Fubon Bank, while simultaneously syndicating another deal of the same size via Cathay United Bank.
-
Companies usually park their reserves of cash in staid, low-yielding liquid assets. But asset managers are trying to persuade them to invest some of that money differently, in a way that could help them live up to their environmental commitments.
-
Spanish political risk is set to spike in 2019 as the country goes to the polls in local, regional, European and possibly national elections during the next six months. But Spanish companies may be ill prepared to work out more flexible funding plans to cope with this, investors and bankers warned this week. Victor Jimenez and Nigel Owen report.
-
Several Chinese borrowers ventured into the bond market at the end of December, locking up last-minute deals that were mainly supported by anchor orders.
-
Sidley Austin has hired Steven Koyler to join the firm’s global finance practice as a partner in New York.
-
Two troubled Spanish high yield credits, supermarket firm Distribuidora Internacional de Alimentación (Dia) and energy group Abengoa, have started the year with new schemes to reassure investors. More Spanish companies may want to follow suit, sources said, as the country faces a surge in political risk in 2019.
Sub-sections
shared comment list