Top section
Top section
Investors see Europe and smaller companies as safer areas after tech companies hit by AI disruption fears
It's easy for investment bankers to get jaded about awards ceremonies, but they are missing the point
◆ UAE issuers leave emerging markets label behind ◆ What Blue Owl can teach us about private credit for the masses ◆ A bump in the road for UK bridging lenders on the way to securitization
More articles
More articles
More articles
-
Total debt among investment grade EMEA companies has rocketed by almost $1tr since last year, with more debt expected to be needed if a weak recovery leads to lower earnings and cashflow.
-
Indian borrowers are finally returning to the offshore loan market after months of little to no action. But even as a pipeline builds, bankers remain wary of challenges around execution. Pan Yue reports.
-
German electricity transmission firm Amprion launched Schuldschein and Namensschuldverschreibungen (NSV) notes on Wednesday, becoming the first borrower to launch a deal into the market this month. Bankers are gearing up for a busy fourth quarter.
-
NatWest plans to contact around 3,500 of its corporate clients from Thursday to inform them about the end of Libor as a benchmark and what their options and next steps are, as a recent survey showed that the vast majority of companies have not made any tangible efforts towards moving debt facilities to risk-free rates.
-
Sheng Ye Capital, a Hong Kong-listed financial services provider, has made its debut in the syndicated loan market. It is raising funds in offshore renminbi.
-
Credit Suisse has made several senior changes to its financing group in Asia Pacific.
Sub-sections