© 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 371,188 results that match your search.371,188 results
  • The beauty of issuing perpetuals as a funding strategy for Brazilian corporates was demonstrated once again this week with three blowout deals totaling $1.3bn.
  • The long saga of Polish oil and gas monopoly PGNiG's IPO came to an end this week with a successful Z2.7bn ($840m) flotation through HSBC, just days before the government is set to be swept from office.
  • The long saga of Polish oil and gas monopoly PGNiG's IPO came to an end this week with a successful Z2.7bn ($840m) flotation through HSBC, just days before the government is set to be swept from office.
  • The Dutch State Treasury Agency employs a unique technique to sell its government debt, choosing a middle route between auction and syndication. Jo Richards reports on the reasons for the DSTA's distinctive approach and on how the process has evolved over the two years since its introduction.
  • Bids are due this week for telecom company TDC's directories business. Bankers had speculated that a trade buyer would eventually win out in the auction because there may not be room in Europe for another stand-alone yellow pages company. They have pointed to Netherlands-based World Directo-ries, UK-based Yell and Yellow Brick Road, which has businesses in Austria, Finland and the Netherlands.
  • Rating: Aa3/AA-/AA-
  • Rating: A3/A-/A-
  • Is Deutsche Bank fine-tuning its business plan? Rival bankers in Frankfurt who watch Deutsche's every move — and then usually try to imitate them — are understandably nervous.
  • Rating: Aa3/A+/A+
  • Much has been expected from Latin borrowers raising local currency bonds in the international markets, especially after Colombia and Uruguay have led the way over the last 12 months. But many sovereigns are opting instead to encourage foreign investors into their domestic markets as a means of extending their own local access to intermediate and long dated fixed rate bonds. Danielle Robinson reports.
  • Rating: Aa3/A+/A+