© 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 370,706 results that match your search.370,706 results
  • The books are out this week for the buy-out of Spanish travel company Amadeus. EuroWeek hears that there are about eight private equity sponsors planning to put in bids for it. The company could net up to Eu5bn.
  • Roadshow managers for the next AyT Cédulas Cajas issue will be decided today (Friday) ahead of a new issue late this month.
  • What is happening at Morgan Stanley, the nearly super-blue chip house which likes to think of itself as being one of the few remaining touches of class on Wall Street? Has Morgan Stanley become so obsessed with trying to keep up with Goldman Sachs that it has thrown caution to the wind and its old rulebook out of the window?
  • US dollar swap spreads bounced off their lows this week as issuance in dollars and euros slowed after the recent glut. But the market has been enlivened by the appearance of Eu4bn of swapped Tec 10 deals.
  • The facilities to back Montagu Private Equity's leveraged buy-out of survival technology company Survitec from Air-Sea Survival Equipment Limited will be launched next week. There is a bank meeting on October 8 in London.
  • The Skr4.75bn five year bank loan for Swedish refrigeration group Dometic has closed. Mizuho (coordinator), Nordea and Svenska Handelsbanken are arranging the deal which will refinance facilities originally put in place for private equity sponsor EQT's purchase of the company from Electrolux in 2002.
  • Swiss International Air Lines (Swiss) has signed a term sheet for a Sfr325m ($258m) loan with HBOS, Barclays, Credit Suisse, UBS and Cantonal Bank, The borrower said, however, that the consent of ?various third parties? is needed before a definitive credit agreement could be agreed.
  • HSBC was the highest climber in league table one this week, moving up one place to eighth. The bank led several large vanilla deals including a Eu100m three year trade for Eni Co-ordination Center that pays annual interest of 5.25%.
  • A $30m two year revolving credit for ASE Test was signed on September 29. Mandated arranger Citibank held $14.5m.
  • Amount: Eu700m
  • Telecom Italia returned to the US dollar market this week with a blowout $3.5bn three tranche global bond, a deal whose size tipped September into record territory for US bond issue volume.