© 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

Emerging Market Loans

Top Section/Ad

Top Section/Ad

Most recent


Hydrocarbons, power and infrastructure bulked large last year
Senior loans banker leaves Deutsche after 14 years
Four sectors emerge with strong pipeline for Tanzania, Uganda, Namibia and Mauritius
First-of-its-kind opinion lays out World Bank, ADB and shareholders’ obligations under international law
More articles/Ad

More articles/Ad

More articles

  • Joint Stock Commercial Bank for Investment and Development of Vietnam has closed an offshore borrowing worth $150m. After the company deciding not to exercise a greenshoe option, lenders faced a large scale-back.
  • Chinese property companies have seen their funding options restricted in a variety of markets, leaving the offshore loans markets the only avenue for them to raise new funds. But loans bankers, who have long operated in an uneasy grey area for such deals, are worried they will be next in the firing line. Pan Yue reports.
  • Fallout from a diplomatic incident drove yields on Turkish sovereign paper to almost 20% this week. While yields have come off their highs, the picture remains bleak for the beleaguered nation.
  • Credit Suisse and Standard Chartered are providing a $1.1bn loan to back the delisting of Indian metal and mining company Vedanta Resources from the London Stock Exchange.
  • We Soda, a soda ash producer fully owned by Turkish industrial conglomerate Ciner Group, has signed three seven year term loans totalling $1.66bn-equivalent in the biggest Turkish corporate loan in half a decade.
  • China Industrial Securities International Financial Group, a subsidiary of Industrial Securities, has launched a debut loan of up to HK$4bn ($510m).