© 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

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 370,322 results that match your search.370,322 results
  • * Steve Abrahams is to leave the capital markets division at the Inter-American Development Bank, which he has run for 10 years. He remains with the bank as executive secretary of its oversight committee on fraud and corruption, which was set up in March to monitor loans and projects for ethical problems.
  • Bulgaria The Republic of Bulgaria's 2002 budget has been revealed, but does not include details of a planned active debt management strategy. The forecast budget deficit is 0.8% of GDP, though the government may seek a higher figure when it meets the IMF again later this year.
  • * Crédit Agricole looks set to test investor sentiment this year as observers suggest that a syndicate has started to be formed. European banks were this week pitching to be part of the proposed Crédit Agricole IPO. Bankers also suggested this week that the unit could be worth up to $18bn, giving a value to the IPO, which is expected to represent 30% of the company, of $5.4bn.
  • * City of Montréal Rating: A2/A+
  • Fourteen trades were closed in other currencies on Friday. Caisse Centrale du Credit Immobilier de France was busy in Polish zloty. It issued a Z40 million ($9.63 million) five-year note. The note, which pays interest semi-annually, pays an initial coupon of 14.5%. The note pays a final coupon of 6m (Polish) Wibor (Warsaw inter-bank offered rate) and was issued at a price of 100%. Commerzbank was the bookrunner. Kommuninvest saw opportunities in Swedish krona. It issued a Skr200 million ($18.93 million) four-year index-linked note. The note is part linked to the S&P 500, the Topix and the Dow Jones. The note was self-led by Kommuninvest. Skandia Capital also saw opportunities in the currency. It issued a Skr100 million two-year note that will be issued on October 19 2001. Hong Kong dollar was the most active currency choice and seven deals were closed. The largest trade was issued by Union Bank of Norway: a HK$120 million ($15.39 million) seven-year note that pays a final coupon of 5.54%. The note will be issued on October 30 2001. Credit Lyonnais Finance closed the smallest Hong Kong dollar trade. Its HK$8 million note goes out to December 2001 and will be issued on October 26 2001. HSBC found opportunities at the short-end. It closed three HK$80 million trades. The longest trade goes out to December 12 2001. The sterling market was also fairly active. Three deals were closed: two £
  • It was a quiet day in the markets for other currencies yesterday and sterling and Hong Kong dollar were the only active currency choices. Only four trades were closed but Tesco saw opportunities in sterling and issued a £
  • Deals in other currencies picked up after a disappointing day on Monday and 11 deals were closed yesterday. European Investment Bank (EIB) was largely responsible for this increase in activity: it closed six sterling trades that all go out more than 10 years. Its longest trade was a £
  • * Allgemeine Hypothekenbank AG Rating: Aa2/AA+
  • The Eu500m-Eu700m five year bond for Polish oil and gas company, PGNiG, is expected to be issued either today (Friday) or early next week, according to lead manager ABN Amro. One banker hoping to be in the syndicate for the deal told EuroWeek that the offering has already attracted a book of Eu600m. Price talk is in the area of 250bp over swaps.
  • * World Bank Rating: Aaa/AAA/AAA
  • Ford, struggling with dismal third quarter earnings and this week's two notch downgrade by Standard & Poor's (S&P), has announced a $3bn plus five and 30 year global bond at price guidance not far away from where Mexico trades. In a demonstration of just how wide Ford credit spreads have gone in recent months, price guidance on the Ford Motor Credit January 2007 tranche is 275bp-285bp, at a time when Mexico 2006s trade around 304bp bid, 286bp offered.
  • Portman Building Society has raised the limit off its Euro-MTN programme to £