© 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
  • Corporate treasurers are sometimes portrayed as risk averse individuals who pore over financial models to deliver the safest funding for their companies. They do, however, also have a responsibility to raise those funds at the lowest cost. Pragmatism is a trait companies should value highly in a treasurer.
  • Several international borrowers are marketing in the Schuldschein market. Though there are several idiosyncratic reasons for each, the prevailing idea is the instrument is competing with the unrated bond market on price again.
  • Underwriters in the European high yield market that provided bridge financing in the first few months of the year for lightly covenanted deals are suffering amid investor pushback and failed offerings, said market sources.
  • Italy faced an auction test on Thursday morning and came out with a result that traders said “wasn’t that bad”, despite the political uncertainty facing the country.
  • Other than balance sheets, all banks have to offer is their people. And this week, Nomura made an unusually large statement, hiring three of them at once to bulk up its EMEA rates business.
  • The Kingdom of Bahrain’s five year CDS spread has plummeted as investors’ fears of the country’s inability to meet the repayment of its $750m November 2018 sukuk began to recede after a statement of support from Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates. But analysts and syndicate officials are being clear that this is only the first step to Bahrain regaining access to the capital markets.
  • Russia’s Bank for Development and Foreign Economic Affairs (VEB) has signed an agreement with China Development Bank that could see the Chinese state run lender provide up to $9.8bn-equivalent in loans to finance joint projects between the two institutions.
  • German construction firm Hochtief opted for a €500m no-grow deal when it came to market for the first time as a rated company this week. The company gained a BBB rating from Standard & Poor’s in May 2017.
  • Tuesday’s senior issue from AIB Group struggled to get over the line, and sent a message to the market about waning investor demand for all but the safest bonds.
  • Something strange is occurring in Switzerland, where the Swiss franc bond market is rife with both deep optimism and pessimism. Deal execution is riskier than it has been for years, but is being driven by bond buyers’ perceptions of better times ahead. Silas Brown asks whether the market is about to regain its mojo or if this is a case of jam tomorrow.
  • Two German issuers sold corporate bonds on Tuesday and on Thursday, mobile phone operator O2 Telefónica Deutschland made it a German treble the following day.
  • The US dollar bond market ended a record-breaking month on a downbeat note as borrowers stayed on the sidelines amid a poor technical backdrop. Charter Communications became the first SEC registered issuer of the week on Thursday with a long five year trade and the only two other benchmark trades were from 144A issuers on Tuesday.