Top section
Top section
Take note of Turkey's borrowing template
Other sovereigns can learn a lot from how Turkey navigates the public bond market
◆ Deal attracts granular book for a Pfandbrief ◆ Premium paid but outcome still 'fair' ◆ Elsewhere, Finnish sub-benchmark deal proves popular
BNP Paribas uses empty pre-ECB market for solo €1.5bn raid
◆ Sole management enables quick sale ◆ Debate on fair value but some concession left ◆ Big green bond comes between two SNP redemptions
Maersk hauls in big oversubscription for €500m green deal
◆ Whopping demand for Danish logistics group ◆ Deal lands comfortably inside fair value ◆ Green label helps execution
◆ Deal attracts granular book for a Pfandbrief ◆ Premium paid but outcome still 'fair' ◆ Elsewhere, Finnish sub-benchmark deal proves popular
Sub-sections
-
◆ Nordea outmanoeuvres spread widening by waiting to print in euros ◆ It and Crelan's SNP deals attract close to €6bn of orders ◆ 'Right to pay' some concession
-
◆ Abundant demand for UK water credit ◆ Order book about three times deal size
-
◆ Finnish nuclear generator joins elite green club ◆ Order book stays strong amid price tightening ◆ Deal priced around fair value
-
Al Rajhi offers tier two social sukuk, Doha Bank a senior five year
-
Banks see opportunities in supporting direct lenders' ESG loan initiatives
-
Hong Kong dollar trades keep up momentum
-
Canadian banks have high fossil fuel financing and are heavily used as repo collateral
-
High emitters' bonds to be assigned lower value as collateral
-
Measuring climate risk for repo haircuts will have no direct effect, but sends a message
-
Skipping Taxonomy was wise, but reporting and planning regulations must be world-leading
-
◆ UK rule change cheers covered bonds... ◆ ... as it shelves Taxonomy plans amid wider transition shift ◆ Digital markets: what makes a swap smart
-
Transition plans and disclosure rules will be central to UK’s bid for sustainable finance leadership
-
A $1.9bn IMF loan for Tunisia is frozen, while the government has refused to implement fiscal reforms, leaving the country at risk of default unless it can continue to source finance from other lenders
-
Proper ministerial decision-making body would force countries to reach agreement
-
As president, Ajay Banga has given the World Bank the highest ambition and clear targets, but reality rarely cooperates. He is trying to drum up support from business and banks. This week in Washington, the Bank must convince wealthier countries to back its mission with more money — but runs the risk of the Annual Meetings being overshadowed by strife over conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East
-
With political tensions gripping the world economy and threatening to squeeze even tighter, the International Monetary Fund’s managing director Kristalina Georgieva has her work cut out at this week’s annual meeting. If the IMF is to remain relevant and capable, she must strike deals that countries of different political hues and degrees of wealth can live with
-
Social housing company signs range of revolvers from existing lenders
-
Banker brings wealth of experience from capital market roles
-
Loan market tranquil but outlook is not pretty
-
Banks are taking back control after Covid
-
New long bond to be an ‘eye-catcher’ for absolute yield buyers
-
Conditions attractive for convertible issuers to refinance
-
Several European IPOs are running despite US attacks on Iran
-
European IPOs expected next month
-
Sponsored by CAF – Development Bank of Latin America and the Caribbean
CAF gearing up to transform regional development
-
Sponsored by Emirates NBD Capital
Emirates NBD Capital: An unrivalled conduit for Middle East liquidity
-
-
Sponsored by Instituto de Crédito Oficial
ICO: a benchmark issuer in the European sustainable bonds market