Top section
Top section
International Finance Corp’s drive to introduce development finance to the CLO market is advancing. Its second deal of $509m had more investors, more tranches and better pricing, supporting its rapid growth
Divisions deepen over multilateral development banks’ climate commitments
Deal rules and slow primary market make ramping up deals difficult
More articles
More articles
More articles
-
Russian borrowers are making their presence felt in international capital markets. Two syndicated loans are expected to close this week, as well as a bond from a steel manufacturer. The sovereign is also eyeing up the the primary bond market, but the threat of further US sanctions still looms.
-
Guinea Alumina Corp, a subsidiary of Emirates Global Aluminium, has secured a $750m loan, in the largest financing package for a greenfield mining project in Guinea's history.
-
Sub-investment grade markets are starting to follow high grade in using ESG structures, with a high yield issue from microfinance firm Bayport and a leveraged loan from Spanish telco MasMovil set to show whether the changes will help issuers cut financing costs.
-
France’s Voltalia has signed a €100m sustainability-linked credit facility, in a deal the renewable energy firm says is the first of its kind for European independent power producer.
-
The head of international loan finance at South Africa's Standard Bank Group will retire after 37 years with the bank.
-
Spanish infrastructure and renewable energy company Acciona has returned to the Schuldschein market with a €150m-minimum triple tranche transaction. As lenders begin to loosen lines to Italy and Spain, arrangers said there may be more borrowers from those countries to come.
Sub-sections