© 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 370,796 results that match your search.370,796 results
  • Rating: Aaa/AAA
  • Rating: Aaa/AAA
  • Akbank has launched its $300m 364 day term loan into general syndication. The deal will pay a margin of 65bp over Libor and refinances part of a $450m one year term loan signed last September. That deal paid a margin of 75bp over Libor.
  • Turkey's long term sovereign debt upgrade will reinforce the renewed investor confidence in the Turkish loan market and act as yet another downward force on pricing, said bankers yesterday (Thursday). The republic, upgraded by Standard & Poor's to B+ from B, has already moved up once this year, at the end of July when S&P moved its rating from B- to B.
  • Turkey's long term sovereign debt upgrade will reinforce the renewed investor confidence in the Turkish loan market and act as yet another downward force on pricing, said bankers yesterday (Thursday). The republic, upgraded by Standard & Poor's to B+ from B, has already moved up once this year, at the end of July when S&P moved its rating from B- to B.
  • UBS took its first steps as a lead manager in the Australian dollar market this week with a Swiss-targeted A$100m offering for Oresundsbro Konsortiet, also a newcomer in the currency.
  • Aval Bank is speaking to lenders about a possible $10m deal in October. EuroWeek hears that the facility will pay a margin of 395bp over Libor.
  • Uruguay reached a milestone in the international bond markets this week when it priced a successful $200m Uruguayan peso-denominated global deal, its first bond since its debt restructuring in May.
  • Swap spreads in dollars and euros moved in opposite directions this week. While in the US the lack of new debt and a sell-off in Treasuries pushed swap spreads wider, in Europe there was heavy new issuance and swap spreads were squeezed tighter.
  • Venezuela made another surprise appearance in the international bond markets this week, with an $850m re-opening of the $700m 10 year global it sold last month. A local exchange offer absorbed $380m of the new paper.
  • Rating: B2/B+