© 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
  • Kemal Dervis, Turkey's minister of economy, has finalised a deal for the privatisation of Turk Telecom, achieving enough concessions to ensure the IMF will start issuing funds at its next board meeting on May 15. After a 4-1/2 hour meeting with the three party leaders from the ruling coalition, it was agreed to limit any purchase by a foreign strategic investor to 45%, in line with demands from the Turkish military.
  • Abbey National, the UK's second largest mortgage bank, will next week launch a £2.17bn securitisation, its third from the master trust vehicle it created in June last year. Lead managed by Credit Suisse First Boston and Schroder Salomon Smith Barney, the deal is the first of two Abbey plans to launch over the next two months.
  • Banca Monte Dei Paschi di Siena (MPS), one of Italy's 10 largest banks and which claims to be one of the oldest banks in the world (founded in 1472), last Friday launched a Eu348m securitisation backed by personal investment loans to its most credit worthy clients. Lead managed by BNP Paribas and MPS itself, the deal is the first public securitisation of this asset class in Italy. Only a few similar deals have been completed in Europe.
  • Three small Italian co-operative banks, located in the Tuscany and Piedmont regions, are preparing to launch a groundbreaking Eu95.2m securitisation in the next two weeks. Lead managed by Banca IMI, the deal will combine the mortgage portfolios of the three banks to create a pool large and diverse enough to securitise - something they could not achieve alone.
  • Swiss Re Capital Markets this week closed a $120m catastrophe bond that transfers the risk of windstorms in France and a hurricane in Florida or Puerto Rico into the capital markets. The deal is the first to securitise hurricane risk in Puerto Rico and it is also the first to provide using a catastrophe bond - what is known in the insurance world as a reinstatement.
  • The buyside in general sees the efforts to cut/waive assignment fees as a positive step, but still a few dozens steps away from the promised land. Roughly 60% of respondents said moves to alleviate the assignment fee burden have helped the market, noting that lopping off fees can make smaller trades more economical and investors tend to gravitate toward the players that will waive fees. But a large part of the "yes" group gave a qualified endorsement.
  • Sixty-nine percent of fund managers agree that consolidation has had a negative effect on the market this year, but responses indicated that they think this in varying degrees. The general consensus was that consolidation has placed the power of the market in the hands of a few banks. One manager went so far as to describe the market as an oligopoly. With bigger banks grabbing more of the market, "The survivors are taking advantage of their growing strength," said one manager, not specifying just how it is they're doing this. That power shift, some said, has taken some of the aggressiveness out of the market. "Banks are less aggressive in general," one respondent said. "Investors have [fewer] options, so suspect banks are able to take more out of trades. You get the sense there's more complacency."
  • Harnischfeger Industries' attempt to exit Chapter 11 bankruptcy is said to be prompting trades at around 50. Loews Cineplex's bank debt is now offered at 88, and bids are in the 85 range, according to dealers. An auction earlier in the week resulted in a trade of Bridge Information System's bank debt at 35.5, up from 30 last week.
  • Once frozen out from the international capital markets, Scandinavian corporates are these days more free to venture beyond their home region for funding. No longer able to rely on local reputation, the Nordic companies are learning to court investors and rating agencies to bring truly international deals. What these deals lack in size they make up for in quality, and, as Philip Moore discovers, both domestic and bulge bracket banks are jostling for the business.
  • Samsung Life Insurance, one of the largest insurance companies in Korea, recently purchased a credit-linked note from Deutsche Bank in Seoul. The USD30 million note is believed to have been structured by Deutsche Bank's Hong Kong office via a special purpose vehicle, according to a trader in Seoul. Further details of the transaction could not be determined by press time, but the trader noted this type of transaction is unusual in the Korean market. Officials at Samsung Life and Deutsche Bank declined all comment.
  • Spread levels of five-year protection on Cendant Corp. tightened considerably last week in response to the success of the company's USD800 million convertible bond issuance. Before last Monday's issue, spreads on New York-based Cendant were at around 230/260 basis points, according to Greg Rosen, director, credit derivatives trader at Credit Suisse First Boston in New York. After Cendent tapped the market those levels narrowed by about 65bps, and by the day's end they were trading at 180/210 bps. On Wednesday, default spread levels were holding steady at 180/200bps, said Rosen.
  • Investment trust corporations (ITCs) in Korea are expected to jump into the country's interest-rate swap market soon, after getting the green light to transact April 24 from the Financial Supervisory Service (FSS), according to swappers and asset managers in Seoul. Traders said ITCs, some of which have up to KRW5 trillion (USD3.8 billion) in bond portfolios, will start using swaps as early as next month. Market officials said although Korean insurance companies and local banks already use the OTC swap market, the regulator had previously barred ITCs because of their lower credit ratings.