© 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 370,524 results that match your search.370,524 results
  • Fitch and Moody’s gave a preliminary rating of triple-A to the senior notes on CMF 2020-1, a prime sterling RMBS with 29.4% of loans in the pool coming from the UK government’s Help-to-Buy scheme.
  • Apple’s announcement that it is likely to miss revenue estimates for the first quarter of 2020 should serve as a warning to equity investors that the economic effects of the coronavirus outbreak should be feared alongside any threat of it becoming a pandemic.
  • JP Morgan has promoted a whole new layer of leadership in its investment bank, reaching down to debt capital markets, equity capital markets and M&A. At the top of the tree, Carlos Hernandez has moved from being head of global investment banking to executive chair and has appointed new co-heads of global investment banking.
  • Lloyds Bank has put credit sales head Bob Paterson at risk, a securitization specialist who had been leading sales on the bank’s risk transfer programmes.
  • SRI
    By opening up its debut social bond to retail investors, Munich highlighted an often overlooked strength of the socially responsible investment (SRI) market. Distributed correctly, these funding tools demonstrate the true impact of ethical investing.
  • Some of the more creative souls in corporate debt markets are trying to find ways to gloss over the impact of the IFRS 16 accounting standard. Brought in a year ago, it has driven up some firms’ leverage ratios by forcing them to report leases on their balance sheets, even though their businesses have not changed. But it would be a bad idea to act as if the rules had never changed.
  • Alstom, the French maker of trains and railway equipment, has struck a €7.45bn deal to acquire Bombardier’s trains division and will partly finance the trade via a €2bn rights issue later this year or in early 2021.
  • Australian healthcare business Genesis Care is borrowing A$1.4bn-equivalent to fund the buyout of 21st Century Oncology’s US business, giving loan investors a rare chance to put money to work at a spread north of 400bp.
  • Traders told GlobalCapital this week that low yield levels were ‘starting to become a problem’ for covered bond buyers, following a sustained rally in rates, adding that it was extremely hard to find offers on bonds in many parts of the market.
  • The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development will be introducing a new coupon calculation methodology for Sonia-linked floating rate notes with its deal on Wednesday. The trade will use the structure that it pioneered for its Sofr debut last summer. The leads say this new format will be helpful should Sonia move towards a single index, like Sofr will in March. But some bankers away from the deal are unconvinced that the new method will appeal to investors.
  • US companies piled into the euro bond market on Tuesday, as white goods maker Whirlpool, Dow Chemical and apparel company VF Corp launched medium to long maturity debt.
  • BNP Paribas was guiding investors towards a coupon in the 4.75% area for a new additional tier one (AT1) on Tuesday, as it looked to price its deal at the lowest level ever acheived by a European bank in the dollar market.