© 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 | 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 370,984 results that match your search.370,984 results
  • Though confidence seems to be trickling back, emerging market investors are clearly starting to embrace the summer holidays. Only small, bespoke bond supply is seeing the light of day.
  • The Hong Kong Stock Exchange is delaying a review into allowing corporations to own shares with weighted voting rights (WVRs), potentially giving the Singapore Exchange, its chief rival, a leg-up in the race to host technology IPOs.
  • Foreign investors are holding more Chinese bonds than ever before, and they are ready to grab even more, according to a recent survey by S&P. Sentiment is likely to stay bullish as China’s monetary policy diverges from the US and the onshore market continues to grow, say analysts.
  • Pintec Technology Holdings is gauging investor appetite for its IPO on the Nasdaq ahead of roadshows that are expected to start next Wednesday.
  • South Korean short-haul carrier T’way Air is set to raise W233.6bn ($207.1m) after pricing its IPO below guidance.
  • UBS has hired two senior equity capital markets bankers formerly with JP Morgan for its Asia operations.
  • Marlette has priced its $402.31m securitization of consumer loans held by its Best Egg platform.
  • In its newest non-performing deal, NHLT 2018-2, Nationstar Mortgage is securitizing cash flows from 1364 non-performing home equity conversion mortgages (HECMs) sourced from Ginnie Mae-sponsored securitization pools.
  • Corporate borrowers are being urged to prepare for the phase out of Libor, but loan documents are not yet up to the job of facilitating an orderly switch to a new rate, warned Fitch Ratings on Tuesday.
  • With African bond volumes set to hit an all-time high this year, it would be easy to interpret the record-breaking number as an indication that investors are set to stand by Africa as a storm hits EM. But that would be wrong — EM investors largely think that African bonds are going to tank, or at least struggle, it’s just that they are all betting on getting out first.
  • Brexit has been a slow-burning problem for the City of London, but burning it is. Financial markets are regulated. With worse access to Europe, the UK must make itself attractive to financial firms in other ways.
  • Populist politicians challenging their central banks and blaming foreign businesses for their country’s woes is not normally something investors expect from the United States, but President Trump forces investors to think about political risks which are far more common in emerging markets.