© 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
  • A CONVERTIBLE bond offering for Taiwanese SRAM manufacturer Winbond scraped home yesterday (Thursday) with pricing at the far end of the revised deal's indicative range. The deal was hit by the mini-meltdown in the republic's stock and currency markets prompted by the government's decision to abandon its support of the Taiwanese dollar last Friday. Following those events bankers said most of the immediate pipeline from the country has been thrown into disarray.
  • South Africa The well supported $225m (increased from $200m) one year term loan being arranged by Bank of New York, DG Bank, NatWest Markets and Sumitomo Bank for ABSA Bank Ltd was signed last Friday.
  • China Nippon Life Insurance Co and Sumitomo Bank have been mandated to arrange a $50m term loan for China Petro-Chemical Corp (Sinopec).
  • Indonesia Asset backed securities
  • THE mounting crisis in Asian markets dominated sentiment on Thursday following the sharp fall in the Hang Seng index and attacks on the Hong Kong dollar. Equity markets fell globally as a result of the Hong Kong turmoil, and government bond markets rallied dramatically as investors sought a safe haven from the stockmarket turbulence.
  • Market commentary Compiled by Gerard Perrignon, Hambros Bank Ltd, London. Tel: +44 171-865 1759
  • Australia NatWest Australia has been mandated to arrange a A$350m note issuance facility for BHP. The five year deal is to refinance existing debt.
  • GLOBAL co-ordinators Argentaria, Santander and Merrill Lynch have completed the Spanish government's sale of stock in its national electricity utility, Endesa. The deal was executed in extremely difficult market conditions. Following last week's news that Endesa's joint venture with Enersis of Chile may be under review, the deal was this week hit by a correction in the world's stockmarkets as the Madrid suffer from the growing chaos emanating from Asia.
  • BAT INDUSTRIES plc is set to take centre stage in the syndicated loan market over the next few weeks as the company seeks to establish a massive $8bn loan facility backing the demerger of its tobacco and financial services businesses. BAT, which has a reputation for managing its banking relationships with exceptional skill, appears to have made all the right decisions in seeking such a large facility through a single financing.
  • THE BRAZILIAN government released details of its sale of shares in Telebras yesterday (Thursday), confirming expectations that the country's telecom privatisation will be among the biggest the world has yet seen, involving the sell-off of 13 separate companies and Telebras's shares being split 13 ways. Communications minister Sergio Motta said that the Telebras system would be divided into three regional wireline holdings, nine cellular A-Band firms and one long distance operator -- Embratel.