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'Hard to classify' Italian corporate trade being marketed to FIG and SSA accounts
BMW heiress Susanne Klatten exits turbine maker
Development bank's credit ratings suffered a blow after Russia's invasion of Ukraine
Another defaulter, Argentina, likely to tap market this year
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Anticipation of a 25bp rate cut kept the bond market quiet, though some plucky issuers found a window
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Multilateral development banks find themselves swept up in two parallel waves of change. As bond issuers, they are having to deftly navigate capital markets that are still emerging from the end of years of historically low rates, being forced to call upon all their experience and sophistication as they fund across multiple markets. At the same time, with the pressure on to fill the huge gap in global development finance, these institutions are being asked to work out how to better use or expand their balance sheets and lend more — all while maintaining their precious credit ratings. GlobalCapital gathered some of the leading supranational issuers at a roundtable in New York City in May to discuss how best to deal with the challenges of this changing world.
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There has never been so much momentum to reform the multilateral development banks. But most of the many avenues to expand their lending have run into difficulties. Jon Hay reports
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The Act could resurface next year after November’s elections
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The deal was almost twice covered on the full deal size amid slight ‘correction’ to European indices
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A book heavy with long-only investors should support a recovery in the freshly listed Abu Dhabi stock