Loan market shrugs off govt shutdown
The US federal government shut down, while the US leveraged loan market kept its doors wide open with investors largely unfazed by Washington’s budget standoff. Leveraged loans, investment-grade credit and private lending all held steady, with bankers and investors pointing to strong technical conditions and a market already hardened by a year of policy uncertainty.

Jezz Farr
What to do if the president of the United States claims your product could trigger neurological behavioural differences in children, as he has suggested with Tylenol and autism? A PR challenge if ever there was one.

Chief executives need to be on alert: 25 CEOs have resigned this year following shareholder activism campaigns to oust them, putting 2025 on track to pass the annual record of 27.
Banks, issuers and third parties are increasingly collaborating instead of competing as they try to make a digitised fixed income market a reality, two new initiatives suggest.
Global M&A activity topped US$1trn in the third quarter for the first time in more than three years, sparking optimism that a pickup in investment banking fees will accelerate into 2026.

The UK has retained its crown as the top hub for trading foreign exchange and interest rate derivatives, according to a report from the Bank for International Settlements, underlining how London remains at the heart of financial markets five years on from the country’s exit from the European Union.
Fiona Chan is joining Lloyds Banking Group's securitisation team based in London, according to several sources. Chan was head of the Barclays UK principal funding and securitisation team in the bank's UK treasury operation, with responsibility for Barclays' UK RMBS, covered bond and risk transfer securitisation programmes.
French commercial property company Carmila made the most of the continuing demand for issuers in the real estate sector on Thursday when it brought a new issue to the market and tendered for its high-coupon notes.
Banks from Central and Eastern Europe continue to take advantage of credit funds seeking alternative means of gaining more attractive spreads or yields, issuing across the capital spectrum.
Egypt made a successful visit to the Islamic finance market with its first such deal in over two years as investors continue to back the sovereign’s fiscal progress.
Banks, issuers and third parties are increasingly collaborating instead of competing as they try to make a digitised fixed income market a reality, two new initiatives suggest.

Dunkin' Brands is serving up a US$900m whole business securitization, taking advantage of strong demand in this corner of the ABS market.
US asset-backed issuance rang up its biggest third quarter in the post-credit-crisis era as issuers continued to take advantage of favorable funding conditions and keen investor demand.
Supply from relatively rarely seen jurisdictions is landing in the market, with two from Portugal and one from the Netherlands. Nevertheless, market participants are starting to question the resilience of spreads after several weeks of sustained ABS dealflow after summer.
Santander Consumer Finance’s latest auto securitisation was upsized amid strong demand as European dealflow started to slow down a bit after the post-summer peak.
Kathy Ryan has left her role as chief sustainability officer at UK-headquartered asset manager M&G.
The decision by Italian utility Enel to turn its back on sustainability-linked bonds and issue only conventional debt is driving debate about the implications for the company and the future of the asset class it pioneered.

A €300m dark green investment mandate for a Dutch asset owner has underscored the growth of impact strategies in private debt, with more than €66bn raised by dedicated impact funds over the past decade while their number has almost tripled, according to impact investment adviser Phenix Capital.
Rabobank piqued investors' interest as it made its return to the euro FIG market on Tuesday with a €1bn 10-year green non-preferred transaction.
Brazil has committed US$1bn to the Tropical Forest Forever Facility , marking the first investment in the ambitious US$125bn vehicle that aims to incentivise countries to preserve their environmentally critical forests and will create a major new investor in emerging market debt.

Airtel Africa is seeking to recruit additional banks to list its payments subsidiary Airtel Money with either the UAE or London being considered as potential venues.
Neptune Insurance's principal financial backers pocketed US$368m late Tuesday from an NYSE IPO that was heavily oversubscribed but traded to a modest premium on debut.
Fermi secured US$682.5m from its Nasdaq/LSE IPO late Tuesday to underpin what is one of the most dramatic financial ramp-ups ever, assisting the nine-month-old startup’s ambitions to become a preeminent supplier of power to AI hyperscalers.
The IPOs for security company Verisure and prosthetics maker Ottobock attracted orders totalling billions of euros in minutes on Tuesday, covering both deals multiple times.
The US federal government shut down, while the US leveraged loan market kept its doors wide open with investors largely unfazed by Washington’s budget standoff. Leveraged loans, investment-grade credit and private lending all held steady, with bankers and investors pointing to strong technical conditions and a market already hardened by a year of policy uncertainty.
US borrowers raised over US$845bn via the broadly syndicated loan market in the third quarter, a 5% decrease compared to the second quarter, but a 21% jump compared to a year ago, pushing issuance for the first nine months of the year to US$2.54trn.

JP Morgan is spearheading a record-breaking US$20bn debt package to back the US$55bn buyout of video game maker undefined Electronic Arts, the largest leveraged buyout in history, and the biggest committed LBO financing on record, according to LPC data.
Prime issuance conditions and a relative dearth of new money have provided a fresh opportunity for sponsors to load up on leverage for assets they are sitting on through choice or necessity.

Four overseas lenders are facing an uphill battle to recover more than US$600m from a Chinese company that was once part of property developer Guangzhou R&F Properties, after the latter's chairman withheld the company's seal to prevent the lenders from removing him as legal representative.

Read the latest stories from the magazine IFR 2602 - 27 Sep 2025 - 3 Oct 2025
27 Sep 2025 - 3 Oct 2025
Moving on
At first glance, Enel’s claim that abandoning the sustainability-linked bonds it has championed is proof of the instrument’s robustness is surprising. If anything, for the most active SLB issuer by far (with €34bn of issuance) to give up on the key performance indicator-linked format seems to undermine a product that has been in constant decline since its 2021 peak.
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