© 2026 GlobalCapital, Derivia Intelligence Limited, company number 15235970, 161 Farringdon Rd, London EC1R 3AL. All rights reserved.

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement | Event Participant Terms & Conditions | Cookies

Search results for

Tip: Use operators exact match "", AND, OR to customise your search. You can use them separately or you can combine them to find specific content.
There are 371,392 results that match your search.371,392 results
  • Nordgold, the Russia-headquartered gold mining company, has become the latest borrower from the country to enter the green financing market after it raised an ESG-linked syndicated loan.
  • Asian sponsor-backed firms are following their Western peers in tapping the loan market for dividend recapitalisations, encouraged by a buoyant stock price and low debt levels. Rashmi Kumar reports.
  • Just over two months after it last issued internationally, Chile returned to primary markets on Tuesday with a sustainable Formosa bond. The deal was the second ever Formosa from a Latin American sovereign and comes as Chile makes efforts to diversify its funding sources.
  • Extra large deals continue to flood into the market, with Elmwood Asset Management resetting its $930m 2019 deal Elmwood CLO II.
  • ABS
    The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau plans to revive the ‘ability to pay’ rule, rescinded in the Trump era, a move which will tighten its grip on payday lenders. While it may be beneficial to have deceptive payday lending practices eliminated, the new rule may stifle the growth of speciality finance lenders and take away a valuable source of funding for borrowers, sources say.
  • Banks that avoid holding a record of a building’s Energy Performance Certificate in some countries are more likely to meet the standard needed to meet the European Commission’s final draft Taxonomy for Sustainable Activities, delegates at the IMN’s virtual covered bond conference heard on Tuesday.
  • Environmental, social and governance factors are driving mergers and acquisition activity as investor engagement reaches critical mass, writes David Rothnie.
  • The fact that a large US insurance company could offer the English Football League better lending terms than UK banks or other investors is revealing. UK lenders are shying away from deals, which has opened the doors to institutional investors. The speed with which a tailor-made EFL deal was done shows how quickly they can replace traditional creditors.
  • London’s Heathrow Airport flew into the investment grade bond markets again on Tuesday, while its rival Gatwick Airport was marketing a high yield issue.
  • Canary Wharf made its debut in the bond markets in its present form on Tuesday, with a green triple tranche bond in euros and sterling that found plenty of demand, despite the rocky future for office space.
  • US institutional investor MetLife has offered a more attractive loan package to the English Football League — England's second, third and fourth professional football divisions — than the UK government and bank lenders.
  • An environmental activist institute has argued that the bookrunners of a Korea National Oil Corp $700m bond priced on Tuesday are being inconsistent with their own climate policies, and might even be taking legal risks, because of the issuer's exposure to tar sands oil production in Canada.