© 2026 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 | 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 370,659 results that match your search.370,659 results
  • Alusuisse-Lonza has overhauled its multi-currency CP programme. The issuer name is now Alcan Holdings Germany. The programme size has also been redenominated from Dm800 million ($359.74 million) to euro750 million ($659.55 million). The shelf was signed in 1991 via Commerzbank. The dealer panel is the arranger, Deutsche Bank and UBS Warburg.
  • French telecoms equipment manufacturer Alcatel, rated Baa1/BBB, will next week launch a benchmark euro transaction targeting either the three or five year maturity. A five year is considered most likely, in line with investor preferences, and unofficial price talk is in the mid-swaps plus 250bp-275bp area.
  • Argentina this week chose Deutsche Bank, Merrill Lynch and Salomon Smith Barney to manage the international part of its $95bn debt restructuring. The mandate was awarded as Argentine prices plunged this week on fears that the government is heading rapidly toward a default on debt payments in the next few weeks.
  • Goldman Sachs has been dropped as a dealer off ASB Bank's $1.5 billion Euro-MTN programme. The programme was signed in April 1998 via UBS Warburg.
  • Hong Kong * PCCW-HKT Capital Ltd
  • Instituto de Credito Oficial has raised the limit off its Euro-MTN programme from euro12 billion ($10.62 billion) to euro15 billion. The issuer signed its programme in 1996 and it has $9.58 billion outstanding off 73 trades. The issuer closed a five-year $1.5 billion trade this week via Credit Suisse First Boston and Salomon Smith Barney.
  • Eni has raised the ceiling off its Euro-MTN programme to euro3 billion ($2.65 billion) from euro2 billion.
  • Investec, the South African financial services group, has taken a large step closer to achieving a dual listing in South Africa and the UK by finally gaining approval for the move from the South African finance ministry. Schroder Salomon Smith Barney is managing the deal that will see Investec separate off its international business from its domestic affairs and then list the new entity on the London Stock Exchange. Despite the split, the company will keep its operations centralised.
  • Italian football club Juventus has started premarketing for its Eu120m IPO, which is scheduled to be priced in the second week of December. Merrill Lynch and Banca IMI are leading the deal. It is expected to be one of the last flotations of 2001.
  • KPN, the heavily indebted Dutch telecoms group, this week launched a Eu5bn equity offering and announced a bold cost cutting plan, which will go a long way to reducing its debt and giving it some breathing space from the rating agencies. Both Standard & Poor's and Moody's reacted positively to KPN's issue, revising their outlooks from negative to stable on their respective BBB- and Baa3 ratings.
  • Kredyt Bank is due to sign a euro1 billion ($879.50 million) Euro-MTN programme in the next few weeks. Merrill Lynch is the arranger. Greg Koczara works in the treasury department at Kredyt Bank and told MTNWeek that the first issue off the programme will take place early in 2002. The notes will be issued by Kredyt Bank subsidiary in Amsterdam and will be listed on the Luxembourg Stock Exchange.