© 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 371,510 results that match your search.371,510 results
  • Bank of Ireland is seeking to fill a spot for a leveraged finance associate and is gearing up to expand its leveraged finance group in the U.S. The position the bank is looking to fill is a replacement for a departing staffer, an official familiar with the bank said. But Bank of Ireland plans to progressively increase its U.S. staff within the next 12-18 months. He added that the bank is currently interested in large cap leveraged deals to build up its loan portfolio. A Bank of Ireland official based in Greenwich, Conn., declined to comment.
  • Part ofIsle of Capri Black Hawk's new credit will be used to back the company's $84 million acquisition of Colorado Central Station and Colorado Grande Casino from International Game Technology. The transaction will allow the company to take advantage of increased market share and consequent expansion opportunities in the fast growing Black Hawk, Col., casino market, according to Moody's Investors Service. The lack of diversified assets that back the new facility, however, burdens the credit. "If you're a creditor, [the Black Hawk assets are] your only source of repayment," said Keith Foley, Moody's senior analyst.
  • Bank of America Securities has begun to market an E1 billion collateralized debt obligation, called Anchor CDO I, that is unique in that it will be the first CDO to feature a junior super senior tranche. Mitch Braselton, head of global structured products marketing for Europe, The Middle East and Africa at BofA in London, says one motivation behind structuring a deal like Anchor is that monolines and reinsurers--super senior swap providers--have changed their criteria and are more demanding about the amount of subordination in a deal.
  • Massachusetts Financial Services is prepping a $300 million real estate collateralized debt obligation for pricing in the first half of next month, says a CDO market participant. The offering will be the second CDO originated by this Boston-based manager. Wachovia Securities will be the underwriter for this transaction, called Crest Dartmouth Street 2003-1. Michelle Tan, v.p. at Wachovia, declined to comment. Joshua Marston, portfolio manager at MFS, did not return calls by press time.
  • Broadwing is working toward an amendment in conjunction with a five-point restructuring plan that will allow the company to deal with its burdensome maturities and amortization. "The most critical issue is getting the bank deal done," said one analyst. The current plan calls for the maturity on the revolver to be extended by 16 months. Pricing on the revolver will be increased to LIBOR plus 4%. Bank of America is the syndication agent on the credit and Citigroup is administration agent. Credit Suisse First Boston and Bank of New York are co-documentation agents.
  • Crown Cork & Seal paper was active last week in anticipation of a refinancing, but there is some skepticism concerning whether investors will buy into the new deal. The market for the name has ticked up to the 97-98 range from the 92-93 range, where it was quoted last month. "It's a good solid credit, but some people just don't do the asbestos game," noted one dealer.
  • Citigroup/Schroder Salomon Smith Barney has tapped Stephanie Ziar for its London-based securitization research effort. Ziar is an internal transfer from the securitization origination desk, says Richard Pagan, co-head of European credit research in London. Ziar reports to Pagan. The securitization research position had been vacant since last August, when Shaker Sundaram left to join UBS Warburg as an asset-backed salesman (BW, 8/25).
  • WEEKLY UPDATE The final week of the month saw another round of robust issuance with $7 billion of investment-grade volume and over $6 billion of high-yield issuance coming to market. This brings the month-to-date investment-grade volume to $53 billion, but slightly more than $20 billion of that falls into the supra/sovereign category. This helps explain why technicals in the more narrowly defined corporate sector remain strong. Thirty billion dollars odd of corporate supply represented no problem for a market intent on over-weighting credit for the year and the payment of over $17 billion in maturities during the month has helped augment demand. An active week in the high yield sector has helped reduce the four-week moving average rating to A- from an annual high of AA- just last week.
  • Deerfield Capital Management, the Chicago-based fixed income specialist, is on the road with a new $300 million collateralized loan obligation called Forest Creek 2003-1. Bear Stearns is the lead arranger for the cash-flow arbitrage deal, which comprises leveraged loans, said a banker. Questions regarding Forest Creek were referred to Jon Trutter, Deerfield's CIO, who declined comment citing the private nature of the deal. A banker at Bear also declined comment.
  • Deutsche Bank and Wells Fargo Bank have filled the book on a $250 million deal for Veritas DGC after a three-month ride through the loan market. The credit began at $275 million and was reduced to $265 million, with a raft of pricing and structural changes in December (LMW, 12/23). Another $15 million was later shaved off the pro rata.
  • A modest and restricted domestic January IPO was easily overlooked by observers of the international markets. But it brought shareholders the first opportunity to take a stake in CIMB – the only publicly-listed investment bank in Malaysia. By Chris Wright
  • MORGAN LOSES TWO IN TOKYO