© 2026 GlobalCapital, Derivia Intelligence Limited, company number 15235970, 161 Farringdon Rd, London EC1R 3AL. 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 371,223 results that match your search.371,223 results
  • The Republic of Indonesia added yet another feather to its cap this week, selling its first SEC-registered bond on Monday. The sovereign has long been considered one of the most sophisticated debt issuers in Asia, and its new $4bn transaction shows how far it has come, writes Morgan Davis.
  • Nine banks have formed the syndicate for a HK$1.25bn loan for Hong Kong-listed China Tian Lun Gas Holdings.
  • Deutsche Bank shook up the senior ranks of its equity capital markets desk in Asia this week, removing the co-head structure and merging ECM with equity derivatives. The move comes amid a global reorganisation being rolled out from the bank’s headquarters that combines the equity and debt financing units with markets. John Loh reports.
  • Vietnam is giving a fillip to transparency around IPOs of state-owned companies, passing a new law that will allow firms that are being privatised to conduct a public bookbuilding. While a step in the right direction, the effect of the law is still being debated, with many problems yet to be overcome, writes Jonathan Breen.
  • Charoen Pokphand Foods (CPF) has brightened up Thailand’s offshore syndications market, tapping international liquidity for a $625m loan. With few other deals from the southeast Asian country whetting lenders’ appetite, banks are keen to take a piece of the fundraising. Shruti Chaturvedi reports.
  • International investors were eyeing the first Kazakh tenge trade to be cleared by Euroclear on Thursday.
  • Lloyds sold two tranches of holding company level senior debt in the yen market on Thursday, including a rare and tightly priced six year portion.
  • A flurry of activity in the Australian dollar market this week may be at an end after a lower than expected third quarter Australian GDP print.
  • Two Chinese government-owned entities, Chengdu Communications Investment Group Corp and Qinghai Province General Aviation Group Co, priced their dollar bonds on Wednesday, but opted for very different tenors — the former a 10 year and the latter 363 days.
  • Brazilian airline Gol returned to bond markets in style on Wednesday — just 18 months after a distressed debt exchange — as investors bought into the company’s turnaround story.
  • Two Latin American borrowers look set to price dollar deals on Thursday as issuance volumes in an already record year for the region’s cross-border bond markets get bigger by the day.
  • Argentine state-owned oil and gas giant YPF is planning to reopen its 10 year benchmark and sell a new long-dated bond to finance a buyback of existing debt, according to a regulatory filing.