© 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 370,828 results that match your search.370,828 results
  • Guarantor: Total SA
  • With its path to EU membership ? however distant ? looking ever clearer, Turkey's bond spreads tightened impressively throughout 2004. For investors looking to play a new round of the EU convergence game, Turkey offers an increasingly attractive place to invest. By Kathryn Wells.
  • United Utilities Water, a subsidiary of United Utilities, this week issued a Eu500m bond through sole lead Deutsche Bank.
  • The $85m facility for Industry Union of Donbass should be signed next week. SG CIB is arranging the deal.
  • A $1.45bn loan for the Dubai Ports Authority has been launched via sole underwriter and bookrunner Deutsche Bank.
  • Rating: A2/A-/BBB+
  • Guarantor: Universal Robina Corp
  • For borrowers, 2004 was a near perfect year in the US dollar bond markets. Despite having begun the year at their tightest levels ever, spreads continued to grind in, Treasuries rallied all year as the Fed raised rates at a measured pace and foreign investors, particularly from Asia, deluged the credit markets with cash, writes Danielle Robinson.
  • Any agreement on an IPO for Polkomtel, the Polish mobile phone company, is still some way off, EuroWeek has learned ? despite suggestions in the press that foreign shareholders had agreed to an IPO later this year.
  • Having been beset by accounting problems in 2003, the US mortgage agencies were looking forward to a quiet 2004. But the US regulator's investigation of Fannie Mae appeared to find accounting irregularities, and the Home Loan Banks came under scrutiny from the ratings agencies. Yet despite the bad press and reduced issuance needs, the agencies continued to innovate. Sebastian Boyd reports.
  • Concerted efforts to cultivate the Asian bid for dollar bonds paid off handsomely for Wal-Mart Stores this week, when the US retail giant's $1bn five year achieved pricing of 1bp below Libor, a remarkable level for a corporate borrower.