© 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 371,392 results that match your search.371,392 results
  • Former UK prime minister, John Major, is the latest in a long line of senior public figures to sign up with The Carlyle Group. Major, who was prime minister between late 1990 and May 1997, becomes chairman of Carlyle Europe.
  • Bahrain EuroWeek hears that banks are bidding for the mandate of a $100m loan for Bahrain International Bank. Proceeds will refinance a $75m revolving credit due for maturity next year.
  • British Telecom’s hopes of remaining a single-A credit were crushed yesterday evening (Thursday) when Moody’s slashed its rating by two notches from A2 to Baa1.
  • British Telecom’s hopes of remaining a single-A credit were crushed yesterday evening (Thursday) when Moody’s slashed its rating by two notches from A2 to Baa1.
  • Deutsche Banc Alex Brown has taken Jim Glascott from Morgan Stanley as a managing director in debt capital markets. He covers corporates, particularly utilities and industrial issuers. Glascott works alongside Ruben Daniels, who handles telecoms coverage, and Chris Whitman, who worked on this week's CIT Group deal.
  • * David Fry, head of origination and syndication in TD Securities' debt capital markets team in London, is moving to the New York office as managing director, investment grade fixed income origination. Fry will work with John Benzier, director of high yield origination, to build an integrated origination effort targeting US and Canadian issuers in the global and Eurobond markets. He reports to Rick Kostoff, head of debt origination, and to Peter Bethlenfalvy, president and COO of TD Securities (USA).
  • Yorkshire Building Society has increased the ceiling off its £
  • Credit Suisse First Boston saw $6bn of demand as it completed a $700m turbo zero equity-linked issue for Nestlé, the Swiss confectioner. The seven year zero coupon convertible bond was a new structure to the European markets. The investors were buying a zero coupon note issued by Nestlé Holdings, and a warrant issued by Nestlé. According to a banker close to the deal, "it was structured to give tax efficiency for Nestlé".
  • Czech Republic Komercni Banka's non-deal roadshow via JP Morgan has been postponed until after the completion of the bidding for the bank's privatisation. Komercni is considering a Eu150m-Eu200m three year bond. Bids for the bank's sale are expected next week from Bank Austria Creditanstalt, Crédit Agricole Indosuez, SG and UniCredito Italiano.
  • Germany Premarketing will begin next Monday for the Eu1bn IPO of Fraport, the owner of Frankfurt Airport. It is expected to continue until May 25, after which bookbuilding will run until June 8. The stock will begin trading on June 11. Local residents opposed to the expansion of Frankfurt airport - which will be financed by the IPO - remain unimpressed by an offer of preferential shares.
  • * DGZ-DekaBank Rating: AAA/AAA
  • Top rated US pharmaceutical company Pfizer launched a ¥60bn seven year global bond yesterday (Thursday), its debut transaction in the international capital markets, the company having previously relied on the US markets for funding. The deal, which matures on March 20, 2008, will be priced today (Friday) at a spread of 7bp area over the JGB 2001 by joint bookrunners Merrill Lynch and Morgan Stanley. Proceeds are to refund short term debt and are reportedly being retained in yen with no swap involved.