Turkey
-
Turkish discount grocer Şok Marketler got its IPO over the finish line at the top of its revised price range.
-
The global pressure on emerging markets, triggered by a multitude of factors but most obviously a rapidly strengthening dollar, has been felt across the asset class. The most notable casualty in equities has been Turkey, which at the beginning of 2018 was expected to produce a bumper crop of IPOs this year.
-
The last two weeks have been the toughest in recent memory for emerging market bond investors who have seen their assets in local currencies and dollars alike take a hammering amid the collapse in the Argentine peso and Turkish lira.
-
JP Morgan's launch of an environmentally and socially conscious version of its EMBI index is well timed, as fund managers realise that dodgy morals can lead to shabby financial statements.
-
Lenders to Vakifbank’s Turkish Islamic finance subsidiary got a 90bp reward for financing the smaller specialist financial institution over its parent company, according to bankers close to the transaction.
-
US President Donald Trump’s decision to reimpose sanctions on Iran has sent Turkey’s bonds, already under pressure from a weakening currency, flying wider.
-
The strengthening dollar is wreaking havoc for emerging market bond investors as assets in local currencies and dollars alike take a hammering.
-
The IPOs of two Turkish retailers, Beymen and DeFacto, were cancelled at the end of last week, after failing to attract enough demand to cover the shares on offer. A third IPO, Şok Marketler, was extended to Wednesday May 9. All three were seeking to list in Istanbul.
-
Shares in Vivo Energy, the African fuel distributor, rose more than 3% on its first day of trading on the London Stock Exchange on Friday, after its £558m IPO attracted substantial demand.
-
Turkey’s Garanti Bank has wrapped up its springtime loan refinancing, raising $1.4bn-equivalent and continuing the pricing trend seen among peers in recent weeks.
-
Turk Eximbank raised $500m with its new six year bond on Thursday. While one banker on the deal said there was some buyside reticence to get involved with Turkish risk, meaning that a higher new issue premium was required, another claimed the premium paid was in line with the rest of the market.
-
Turk Eximbank on Thursday* opened books on a new six year bond following the Central Bank of Turkey’s decision to hike rates by 75bp the day before.