© 2025 GlobalCapital, Derivia Intelligence Limited, company number 15235970, 4 Bouverie Street, London, EC4Y 8AX. Part of the Delinian group. All rights reserved.

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

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 369,340 results that match your search.369,340 results
  • The Eu325.6m debt facilities backing the buy-out of Fläkt have not been pulled from syndication - as some market participants have suggested - and arrangers Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan continue to push the deal through syndication. Although the mezzanine tranche has been popular, the senior debt has not been well received. Detractors view the deal as over-tranched and the Fläkt business model as complex.
  • Huaton Holdings, a manufacturer of printed circuit boards owned by Compeq Manufacturing Co, has awarded the mandate ABN Amro Bank NV (Taipei) to arrange a US dollar fundraising. The borrower has a $35m deal that matured in June and a $60m deal that matures in November next year. A portion of the funds will be used to refinance these existing facilities and the remainder will be used as working capital.
  • The Kingdom of Thailand looks set to return to the dollar bond market for the first time since the 1997 Asian financial crisis with a transaction as large as $1bn and a maturity of up to 10 years.
  • The Kingdom of Thailand looks set to return to the dollar bond market for the first time since the 1997 Asian financial crisis with a transaction as large as $1bn and a maturity of up to 10 years.
  • The closing date for syndication of the Eu250m recapitalisation and refinancing for Friedrich Flender has been extended. Banks were scheduled to be signed into the deal on August 5, but arranger Dresdner Kleinwort Wasserstein has postponed signing to September.
  • The long awaited $80m 364 day bullet term loan for Export Credit Bank of Turkey (Turk Eximbank) was launched into general syndication this week. The deal is only the third by a Turkish financial institution so far this year. Mandated arrangers are ABN Amro (bookrunner), Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi (bookrunner), BayernLB (facility agent), Commerzbank, Crédit Lyonnais, HVB Group (documentation agent), Natexis Banque Populaires and WestLB (bookrunner).
  • Abbey National has successfully battled a hostile market environment to raise £500m equivalent of tax deductible tier one in sterling and dollars, thereby fulfilling a promise made to shareholders in July that it would raise capital outside the equity market. On Tuesday it priced its non-innovative tier one sterling deal at price talk of 225bp over Gilts, but at the substantially reduced size of £175m. The deal had originally been talked at £200m-£300m.
  • The mandate to arrange the $350m one year refinancing for Akbank will be awarded next week. The borrower has already received commitments from some of its relationship banks. The deal will pay a margin of 200bp over Libor.
  • Mandated lead arranger Dresdner Kleinwort Wasserstein has signed banks into the $50m three year facility for National Bank of Fujairah. The deal carries a margin of 47.5bp over Libor. Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank, American Express Bank, ING, Landesbank Rheinland-Pfalz, RZB and Wachovia Bank joined as arrangers for an upfront fee of 45bp. BayernLB and Lloyds TSB joined as lead managers for a fee of 37.5bp and Arab Bank has joined as a manager for a fee of 32.5bp.
  • Italy's region of Lazio is preparing a securitisation of rental streams from regional hospital operators in a bid to cover its past healthcare deficit. Lead managed by Merrill Lynch and MedioCredito Centrale (MCC) the deal is expected to be worth at least Eu500m and to be launched by the end of the year. According to an official at the Lazio treasury, the securitisation will be backed by rental cashflows from some 57 regional hospitals sold to a publicly owned entity and leased back to local health companies.