© 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
  • Another Latin American borrower was set to price dollar deals this week as GlobalCapital went to press, as smaller issuers took a rare opportunity to hold the full attention of investors.
  • Bonds issued by Avianca traded up this week after the Colombian airline completed the final stage of a complex restructuring, effectively giving it permission to push out a looming bond maturity by three years.
  • Christine Lagarde, the new European Central Bank president, has planted a flag, placing climate change at the centre of the ECB’s priorities. That is bold — and laudable — but if the ECB is to have a meaningful impact, green QE is not enough. The ECB must divest its holdings of unsustainable assets.
  • SRI
    Debt market specialists this week put forward contrasting views on the policies the European Central Bank might use to tackle climate change, after Christine Lagarde, its new president, said her strategic review of its mandate and operations would encompass how the bank should respond to it. She also promised action on stablecoins. Burhan Khadbai and Lewis McLellan report.
  • A handful of borrowers came to the dollar bond market this week, front-loading supply ahead of the final Federal Open Market Committee meeting of 2019.
  • Even the best in class make mistakes. Coventry Building Society, incredibly well capitalised when compared with its banking peers, has been overstating its common equity tier one (CET1) ratio. Correcting the mistake does not affect its capital ratio greatly, but the episode raises questions over governance according to one analyst.
  • FIG
    Bankers predict that financial institutions will be looking to pack as much funding as possible into the first few months of next year, in a bid to avoid the event with biggest potential for volatility — the US presidential election in November.
  • Jefferies must pay almost $4m to settle charges relating to the improper handling of American Depositary Receipts (ADRs) and supervisory failure.
  • FIG
    Building on the success of last week’s multi-tranche Sfr1.1bn ($1.1bn) trade, Pfandbriefbank (PS Hypo) rounded off its funding for 2019 on Monday, with a low-key two-tranche Sfr310m issue.
  • The National Grid brought a £50m 10 year bond to the medium term note market on Wednesday — the day before the UK voted in an election marked by a debate about whether utility companies should be nationalised.
  • The amount of exposure to US loan collateral in European CLOs has climbed to as high as 30% for some newly issued deals, as newer managers “recycle” US collateral into euro transactions.
  • Members of the European Parliament have restarted work on a controversial file on the secondary market for non-performing loans. They failed to come to an agreement last spring, with MEPs disputing the level of protection that should be granted to retail consumers.