Top Section/Ad
Top Section/Ad
Most recent
Bankers say deals are still being launched and believe international rivalry can be negotiated
Banks accept some deals will bypass them — others they can intermediate
Sectors shape up as main sources of corporate syndicated lending demand amid renewed geopolitical uncertainty
New twist in Hollywood acquisition as Netflix adds $5bn revolver and $20bn of term loans
More articles/Ad
More articles/Ad
More articles
-
Loan syndicate desk heads at major European lenders are expecting to make budget this year, but the bulk of their desks’ profits will not be coming from the usual sources of loan income nor the torrent of bridge loans that hit the market in the Spring outbreak of the coronavirus pandemic.
-
European syndicated loan bankers are confident that the market is heading towards a tipping point in its transition from Libor, despite new data showing just 18 publicly announced deals in markets that use Libor have signed or been amended to reference risk-free rates.
-
Greencoat Renewables, the Irish renewable infrastructure company, has signed a €200m term loan, as it looks to manage its longer duration leverage.
-
The secondary market in Schuldscheine is rudimentary, partly as the arranging banks have never wanted to encourage it. But a little known brokerage firm is quietly acting as a go-between, helped by its contacts with non-traditional investors, writes Silas Brown.
-
A2A, the Italian multi-utility, pre-funded for 2021 with a €500m trade on Wednesday with what the lead claims is the lowest yield for a deal of its type, as the company prepares to unleash its new business plan that will see it printing more green and sustainability-linked debt.
-
Enel has signed a sustainability-linked loan (SLL) days after printing a bond using the structure. The Italian energy company has doubled down on its sustainability plans by pinning both trades to the same goal.