Alphabet redefines art of the possible with record bond sale
Alphabet last week threw down the gauntlet to its rivals with a groundbreaking US$31.5bn-equivalent bond sale across three currencies that broke multiple records – and underlined its advantage among the small set of technology companies rushing to raise money to finance their ambitious AI investment plans.
UBS bags hefty trading gain in Europe’s sleepiest bond markets
A small band of UBS traders are making waves in Europe’s famously sedate SSA and covered bond markets after scoring a major windfall last year.
Chinese issuers ditch HK plans
Some Chinese issuers are expected to drop their Hong Kong listing plans and raise funds domestically instead after China relaxed follow-on rules for good quality or high-technology companies.
Arclin rekindles lev loans' chemical romance
Following a challenging few months for chemicals borrowers in the leveraged finance market, investors are flocking to a US$1.725bn-equivalent dual-currency loan that backs the US$1.8bn acquisition of DuPont’s heat-resistant fibre business Aramids by US resins manufacturer Arclin.
Prasad Gollakota
The repo market is the heartbeat of bond markets. Like a real heartbeat, when all is well, there is nothing more boring. But when things go wrong … watch out.
A small band of UBS traders are making waves in Europe’s famously sedate SSA and covered bond markets after scoring a major windfall last year.
US regional banks are not only defending market share in investment banking as their larger Wall Street rivals go on the prowl, they are gaining share, using their strong balance sheets and beefing up staff.
The effort to open up debt and equity capital markets to finance the growth of defence and security companies would be helped by more transparency about their operations and the wider adoption of voluntary bond frameworks to showcase the industry's benefits, according to those working to help defence companies raise money for investment.
SoftBank Group sold some of its most profitable investments and took on billions of dollars of debt so that it could triple its bet on OpenAI at the end of last year, in an indication of how Masayoshi Son is increasingly tying his company’s fortunes to the success or failure of the AI outfit.
Alphabet last week threw down the gauntlet to its rivals with a groundbreaking US$31.5bn-equivalent bond sale across three currencies that broke multiple records – and underlined its advantage among the small set of technology companies rushing to raise money to finance their ambitious AI investment plans.
The investment corridor between the Middle East and Asia has been heating up, as bond investors in both regions look to each other for attractive options in a volatile world.
China's efforts to ramp up the internationalisation of the renminbi are paying off as a growing number of SSA issuers line up to issue Panda bonds.
Panama is preparing to fund a tender offer, which was launched last week, with its first dollar bond sale in two years, as fixed income investors take a more favourable view of a Central American country that has been teetering just above junk territory.
MA Money encountered some indigestion for its seventh and largest RMBS issue to date, the upsized A$1.25bn-equivalent (US$880m) non-conforming MA Money Residential Securitisation Trust 2026-1, which included the issuer's inaugural yen tranche.
London-based Fasanara Capital is joining Park Square and Golub Capital in the latest wave of managers pressing ahead with the development of European CLO platforms.
A raft of new private credit CLOs in Europe will come as a relief for a market that has lacked enough issuance of new broadly syndicated leveraged loan deals to fuel the CLO machine. There are potentially eight private credit CLOs making their way into the market, sources say, reflecting the boom in private credit loans and increasing investor comfort with a sector that could offer higher spreads versus CLOs backed by broadly syndicated loans.
Securitisations backed by buy now, pay later receivables could emerge in Europe for the first time as surging e-commerce volumes expand lending to higher-risk borrowers and regulatory tightening boosts investor confidence, according to a Moody's report.
Ledn, which is preparing a rare bitcoin-backed structured finance offering, sold a "significant share" of the loans it planned to securitise in the deal over roughly the past week as the value of the digital currency fell, S&P said in a presale report on Monday.
Two leading Asian borrowers are poised to take biodiversity financing to a new level as China and the Philippines prepare the first sovereign bonds that will dedicate proceeds to addressing biodiversity loss and protecting natural ecosystems.
Tokyo and London are collaborating on transition finance as the two global financial centres join forces to develop the fledgling transition bond market.
South Africa's FirstRand Group's transition finance framework offers a blueprint for structuring the next round of transition deals for issuers in emerging and developing markets.
Some Chinese issuers are expected to drop their Hong Kong listing plans and raise funds domestically instead after China relaxed follow-on rules for good quality or high-technology companies.
Hong Kong’s red-hot IPO market is attracting South-East Asian issuers looking for exits amid illiquid domestic markets.
South Korea's record-setting stock market helped spur interest in Kbank’s revived W498bn (US$346m) Korea Exchange IPO, which finally succeeded after three years of struggle.
AST SpaceMobile secured US$1bn on Wednesday from the sale of a 10-year convertible bond in the latest step in an aggressive balance sheet overhaul that has sharply reduced the company's debt and extended maturities as it transitions to commercial operations.
Following a challenging few months for chemicals borrowers in the leveraged finance market, investors are flocking to a US$1.725bn-equivalent dual-currency loan that backs the US$1.8bn acquisition of DuPont’s heat-resistant fibre business Aramids by US resins manufacturer Arclin.
A trio of high-profile buyouts has enlivened the European leveraged finance market, providing much needed new money supply, although bankers remain sceptical over a meaningful resurgence in M&A as the pipeline remains frustratingly light.
Electronic Arts is leaning more heavily on banks to fund its record-breaking US$20bn buyout financing, seeking at least US$1.5bn in additional term loan A commitments amid strong appetite for the tranche, which could lead to a reduced term loan B portion.
SoftBank Group is in talks with relationship banks for a financing of around US$10bn or larger to fund its new investment in ChatGPT developer OpenAI.
Alpha bet
It’s not often that an issuer’s US$20bn bond offering gets relegated to second billing. But when that issuer, Alphabet, then goes on to smash the record for the biggest ever deal in sterling, excluding the UK sovereign, and print the biggest corporate transaction in Swiss francs since 2009, it’s easy to see why.
Continue ReadingWinters' coming (not going)
Few people would have expected that Diego De Giorgi would leave Standard Chartered before Keir Starmer was forced from Downing Street or Thomas Frank was booted out of Tottenham Hotspur. And yet, on Tuesday morning De Giorgi, the CFO of Standard Chartered who appeared nailed-on favourite to win the top job, suddenly resigned. Meanwhile Starmer clung to his job and Frank still had a good 24 hours left on the Spurs payroll. Funny old game, banking.
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Read the latest stories from the magazine IFR 2620 - 14 Feb 2026 - 20 Feb 2026
14 Feb 2026 - 20 Feb 2026
The repo market is the heartbeat of bond markets. Like a real heartbeat, when all is well, there is nothing more boring. But when things go wrong … watch out.
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