© 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

SRI

Top section

Top section

ING goes green with 12NC7 tier two

◆ ING brings its first euro capital trade of 2026 ◆ Fair value debated ◆ ING's and Intesa's tier two deals were "not a competition"
US drug company Eli Lilly jolted the dollar market awake on Wednesday with an eight-part jumbo trade to fund two recent acquisitions

JP Morgan touches nerve with security and resilience push into Europe

The US bank is showing its global credentials at a time of increased transatlantic tensions but European banks are equal to the challenge
US drug company Eli Lilly jolted the dollar market awake on Wednesday with an eight-part jumbo trade to fund two recent acquisitions
Sub-sections
  • The World Bank will be the latest public sector borrower to hit the long end of the dollar curve after mandating banks on Monday for a new 10 year benchmark, taking advantage of the increased investor appetite for this maturity as a result of the higher yields on offer.
  • IDB Invest, the arm of the Inter-American Development Bank that lends to the private sector, is preparing to roll out a sustainable debt programme which could lead to it issuing all its future bonds in this format.
  • Intermediate Capital Group, the UK alternative asset manager, has signed a £500m revolving credit facility based on Libor, but with provisions to change to risk-free rates when the old benchmark falls out of use.
  • The Central American Bank for Economic Integration (Cabei) is holding investor calls until Tuesday as it looks to sell a debut social bond in dollars.
  • Car rental company Movida became the third Brazilian company this year to sell a sustainability-linked bond when it raised $500m of 10-year debt with a coupon step-up linked to carbon emissions on Thursday.
  • SRI
    Sustainable bond issuance has made its strongest start to the year ever, thrusting the market towards what most observers believe will be a year when many records will be broken — especially in north and south America, where environmental and social consciousness is rising. Jon Hay, Mike Turner and Oliver West report.