

Rupak Ghose
"If I [could] get a better product in the UK, I would list in the UK." Those are the words of Revolut co-founder Nik Storonsky – and they point to a lesson that the UK would do well to heed: after decades of decline, the UK stock market is, to use trading jargon, a price taker not a price maker on the global stage.

June is proving a hot month for M&A moves involving European banks, even if dealmaker-in-chief UniCredit is cooling on its initial approaches to Germany’s Commerzbank and smaller Italian peer Banco BPM.
Deutsche Bank has hired Eric Whorton for its Asia Pacific origination and advisory business, according to people familiar with the matter.
US special purpose acquisition company IPOs are making a comeback after a change in leadership at the Securities and Exchange Commission, with volumes up more than threefold compared with last year.
Citigroup has appointed Drago Rajkovic as global co-head of mergers and acquisitions, according to a memo seen by IFR.

When London’s Alternative Investment Market celebrated its 30th anniversary on Thursday with an opening ceremony attended by representatives of some of the more than 4,000 firms that have raised capital on the market, the party atmosphere was dampened by questions about what the future holds for Europe’s pre-eminent market for growth companies.

Adani Group's Mumbai International Airport has raised US$750m from a private placement of bonds to funds managed by Apollo, affiliates and other long-term investors to refinance debt, Apollo said in a statement.
After a busy last week where eight issuers raised nearly €9bn, the European high-yield market saw another strong start on Monday when seven deals appeared, including one from the emerging markets arena.
Three investment-grade corporate issuers went ahead with deals in the euro market on Monday but others decided to hold back following US strikes on Iran over the weekend.
The primary market for FIG debt continued to defy geopolitical concerns on Monday as deeply sub-investment-grade Greek Additional Tier 1 paper flew out the door and riskier products in general proved to be the most sought after.

Investors in the significant risk transfer market expect banks to turn to synthetic securitisation to manage the impact on their capital ratios from a burst of M&A activity, producing a welcome stream of supply of the complex, private but fashionable product.

Malaysian pawnbroker Ta Yoong is readying Asia's, and likely the world’s, first securitisation using gold-backed pawn loans as collateral.

The Australian structured finance market reopened on June 17 with a couple of atypical deals that drew strong demand from investors seeking alternatives to non-conforming RMBS that have dominated supply.

IFR hosts a comprehensive programme of conferences, seminars and roundtables throughout the year, providing authoritative insight into the trends and outlooks for specific regions and asset classes.
London Climate Action Week is raising its profile with many US-based asset managers in attendance this week as the city gears up to play a more prominent role in global sustainable finance as a result of the sharp pullback by the US.
Tideway, the operator of the Thames Tideway Tunnel known as London's "super sewer", has updated its sustainable finance framework to include blue issuance as the project nears completion.

Multilateral development banks’ adoption of securitisation is finally starting to accelerate with an Inter-American Development Bank proposal for a multibillion-dollar green loan CLO programme and the World Bank making its first asset-backed move by approving a new distribution-friendly loan format.

Super Micro Computer is returning to the convertible bond market for US$2bn of fresh funding to help it meet surging customer demand for high-performance computing servers.
German medtech Brainlab has a set a range of €80–€100 per share for its roughly €400m IPO, wider than recent deals and perhaps reflecting the potential risk of launching in the wake of the US attacks on Iran.

When London’s Alternative Investment Market celebrated its 30th anniversary on Thursday with an opening ceremony attended by representatives of some of the more than 4,000 firms that have raised capital on the market, the party atmosphere was dampened by questions about what the future holds for Europe’s pre-eminent market for growth companies.
US special purpose acquisition company IPOs are making a comeback after a change in leadership at the Securities and Exchange Commission, with volumes up more than threefold compared with last year.

Multilateral development banks’ adoption of securitisation is finally starting to accelerate with an Inter-American Development Bank proposal for a multibillion-dollar green loan CLO programme and the World Bank making its first asset-backed move by approving a new distribution-friendly loan format.

Skechers is planting both feet in the leveraged finance market with a huge slab of debt that will help finance the footwear industry’s biggest buyout, with US$6.4bn-equivalent on offer to fund 3G Capital’s acquisition of the company.
Direct lenders are competing aggressively against banks to snap up the meagre supply of leveraged buyout loans in Europe, tenaciously sticking to historically tight price levels even after tariffs rocked the liquid market.

Read the latest stories from the magazine IFR 2588 - 21 Jun 2025 - 27 Jun 2025
21 Jun 2025 - 27 Jun 2025
A very minor new high for the EUROSTOXX 600 with the market having run into trend resistance off highs from March. It has been an incredible rebound for stock markets in general but could be running out of momentum here. S&P futures have posted an inside day here with a sharp 0.8% loss. Japanese and Chinese markets closed today.
