Top Section/Ad
Top Section/Ad
Most recent
Hatzinger had been Agricole's head of loans for Dach
Investment bank, like the group, wants to diversify outside France, and will lead with its strongest suit, real assets
Demand to invest in the low carbon transition is growing fast, but strategies are very diverse
Recruitments in sales and origination are separate but intended to build debt franchise
More articles/Ad
More articles/Ad
More articles
-
If UK pension savers knew how their money was invested, funds would be more inclined to invest exclusively in environmental, social and governance (ESG) assets. So argues Richard Curtis, the screenwriter, director and co-founder of Comic Relief. He has launched a public campaign, Make My Money Matter, to pressure UK pension funds to invest more sustainably.
-
The biggest reform of UK insolvency law for more than a decade was rushed through Parliament and enacted on June 26, as the coronavirus lockdown is expected to cause a wave of defaults across the economy, reports Jon Hay. The law’s complexity and the haste of its preparation have left restructuring experts chewing over many aspects where they foresee risks of unintended consequences — but also eager to try out some of the law’s new powers.
-
Barclays appoints levfin and sponsors leaders — Créd Ag gives Goldfischer UK role — BTIG hires Huggins
-
Barclays has appointed two new chairs of its leveraged finance and sponsors business, with Chris Turner relocating to New York to become chairman of global leveraged finance.
-
Morgan Stanley has hired Alessandro Mazza as a managing director in its leveraged finance business in Europe.
-
The UK’s new insolvency law came into force on Friday, and lawyers have been spending the weekend picking through its 250 pages to understand the implications. While some have welcomed it, others pointed out that in its haste to push it through Parliament, the government has introduced several changes that skew the balance between various kinds of lenders which hitherto had been treated equally.