© 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 371,022 results that match your search.371,022 results
  • Mediobanca followed Intesa into the Obbligazioni Bancarie Garantite (OBG) market on Thursday and, despite coming with an easier to sell shorter maturity, demand was down by almost two-thirds compared to the earlier deal. Even so, bankers have not ruled out the possibility that one or two Italian banks could soon follow.
  • UK retailer J Sainsbury’s has signed a £3.5bn loan package to back its acquisition of Walmart-owned Asda, with the company raising more debt than the cash component of the deal despite analysts raising concerns about the borrower’s recent debt levels.
  • Digital payment company Nets has agreed a €515m financing package, as the private equity owned Nordic company prepares to merge with Germany’s Concardis Payment and buy Poland’s Dotpay.
  • BNP Paribas said on Thursday that it had hired Paul Hollingsworth as UK economist.
  • HSBC Germany has launched a digital platform for Schuldschein issuance called Synd-X, following in the footsteps of Helaba and LBBW. But unlike its German peers, it aims to preserve the role of banks as gatekeepers to the market.
  • Germany may have been kicked out of the FIFA World Cup but they still know how to issue a good Pfandbrief, according to a German lead manager who worked on HSH Nordbank’s five year Pfandbrief that was launched on Thursday alongside an Austrian deal — Raiffeisenlandesbank (RLB) Oberösterreich’s 10 year, which also achieved an excellent reception.
  • Banks have been hiring staff to help financial sponsors hunt jumbo take-private deals as opportunities dry up elsewhere, writes David Rothnie.
  • CEE
    Corporate bond issuance from central and eastern Europe, excluding Russia, is up nearly 30% year on year as borrowers move early to lock in low coupons before the European Central Bank stops buying bonds and starts raising interest rates.
  • On Wednesday the UK’s final court of appeal rejected Goldman Sachs’ attempt to recover money lost on a loan to Banco Espírito Santo through the British courts. The judge said that the EU’s framework for dealing with failing banks could be undermined if the actions of resolution authorities could be challenged outside of their home country.
  • Goldman’s Furtado heads to Citi — HNA chairman dies on business trip — Veteran loans banker Pemberton passes away — Everbright nabs structured finance boss — Chaudhry leaves Deutsche to study
  • Two Chinese companies, United Asia Finance and Greentown China Holdings, have received strong responses to their offshore borrowings, allowing them to increase the loan sizes.
  • More Chinese technology start-ups have come out with their IPO plans, as Pinduoduo, Aurora Mobile and Opera file their US debuts.