Paramount lines up US$10bn of loans for WBD buy
Paramount Skydance signed US$10bn of loans to back its US$110bn acquisition of Warner Bros Discovery. The move establishes more permanent loan support than the US$57.5bn of debt the company secured in December, and has resulted in the bridge loan’s size being cut to US$49bn from its original US$54bn.
Hybrid yields act as buffer against volatility
Hybrids from Engie and General Mills showed that credit investors are comfortable buying the riskiest products against a fragile backdrop, with relatively attractive absolute yields acting as a cushion.
Archroma leans on second-lien as maturity looms
Swiss chemicals company Archroma has taken a creative approach to its latest refinancing effort with a high-yielding second-lien dollar loan, a move designed to delever its senior stack and convince sceptical lenders to extend the company’s 2027 maturity by three years.
Prasad Gollakota
There is a tremendous amount of fuss surrounding Bill Ackman’s proposal to acquire the outstanding shares in Universal Music Group: an announcement , a detailed presentation deck and a headline 78% premium comprising part cash and part scrip. Typical M&A theatre, at least on the surface. Yet when the smoke clears, what remains looks far less like a genuine bid than a self-help exercise.
Ares Management has appointed EG Morse, Goldman Sach's former co-head of China, as partner and head of Asia credit.
Dutch bank ING Group said it has scrapped the sale of its Russian business to Global Development JSC because there was "no realistic expectation" that the deal agreed 14 months ago would go ahead.
JP Morgan chief executive Jamie Dimon took aim at "non-sensical" bank regulations, complex geopolitics and the need to build a stronger banking system in Europe, among other wide-ranging topics in his latest annual shareholder letter. He said parts of new capital rules were wrong and "un-American".
BNP Paribas has appointed a new head of its Gulf debt capital markets business.
US president Donald Trump loves a weekend social media post, repeatedly divulging market-moving information on these supposed days of rest ever since ordering US forces to start bombing Iran on February 28, the last Saturday of the month.
Hybrids from Engie and General Mills showed that credit investors are comfortable buying the riskiest products against a fragile backdrop, with relatively attractive absolute yields acting as a cushion.
The pace of issuance in the European financials market remained steady on day two of the ceasefire in the Middle East, although concerns regarding its fragility kept a lid on supply, as did earnings blackouts.
SSAs have priced the biggest benchmarks seen over the last month out of a buyer base still cautious about the conflict in the Middle East, even with the two-week partial ceasefire announced by US president Donald Trump.
The Emirate of Abu Dhabi has added to the recent flurry of privately placed deals from the Middle East and North Africa.
Hilton Grand Vacations is returning to the asset-backed market as the timeshare operator seeks to free up cash for share buybacks and to finance business growth.
European securitisation markets are showing early signs of a post-Easter revival, with a debut transaction from Advanzia Bank set to reopen primary markets, market participants said.
The European Banking Authority said in a Q&A posted on its website that a credit rating can only be used to calculate regulatory risk weights if it is publicly disclosed, clarifying an issue debated by market practitioners.
A landmark investment by the United Nations-backed Green Climate Fund is set to transform a niche sustainable soybean financing vehicle into a US$1bn initiative and pave the way for extending its model into areas like cotton, fishing and rice.
Eurofima made good use of a relief rally following the announcement of a two-week ceasefire between the US, Israel and Iran.
ClimateWise, an insurance grouping on climate and nature-related risks that is approaching 20 years of operation, has named Ian Branagan of RenaissanceRe and Tokio Marine Kiln’s Vivek Syal as co-chairs.
Arxis followed through on the planned launch of its US$1.06bn Nasdaq IPO, a deal that comes after a two-week ceasefire agreed late Tuesday between the US, Israel and Iran.
Aevex joined the rush of aerospace and defense companies going public with the launch early Thursday of its US$336m NYSE IPO.
Major shareholder Hanwha will hold 93% of the shares of Norwegian building materials business REC Silicon following completion of a NKr976.2m (US$102.6m) rights issue that elicited little interest from other investors.
SK Hynix has hired Bank of America, Citigroup, Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan to arrange an ADR listing, a person familiar with the matter said.
Swiss chemicals company Archroma has taken a creative approach to its latest refinancing effort with a high-yielding second-lien dollar loan, a move designed to delever its senior stack and convince sceptical lenders to extend the company’s 2027 maturity by three years.
Paramount Skydance signed US$10bn of loans to back its US$110bn acquisition of Warner Bros Discovery. The move establishes more permanent loan support than the US$57.5bn of debt the company secured in December, and has resulted in the bridge loan’s size being cut to US$49bn from its original US$54bn.
Sealed Air was on course to raise just over US$7bn-equivalent in the euro and US dollar debt markets on Thursday as part of the funding for its take-private buyout by CD&R. But the packaging company was forced to change the terms and widen pricing to compensate investors casting a wary eye on the sponsor.
Syndicated lending in EMEA totalled US$309bn in the first quarter of 2026, 19% lower than in the first three months of 2025, according to LPC data, but the loan market remained resilient in the face of persistent geopolitical and economic headwinds.
Against the backdrop of volatility, induced by the war in the Middle East, the emergence of AI as a buzzword and its uncertain, potential impact across various industry sectors, as well as simmering headlines around private credit portfolios, US lenders ushered nearly US$779bn through the broadly syndicated loan market in the first quarter, a 6% decline compared to the first three months of 2025.
Shit happens
If Jamie Dimon was worried that First Brands and Tricolor were evidence of individual “cockroaches” in private credit, then Market Financial Solutions, a collapsed UK bridge loan provider, represents an infestation, judging by some of its borrowers, which include people accused of financial crimes. There are also a number of celebrities – and Gillian McKeith.
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Read the latest stories from the magazine IFR 2627 - 4 Apr 2026 - 10 Apr 2026
4 Apr 2026 - 10 Apr 2026
There is a tremendous amount of fuss surrounding Bill Ackman’s proposal to acquire the outstanding shares in Universal Music Group: an announcement , a detailed presentation deck and a headline 78% premium comprising part cash and part scrip. Typical M&A theatre, at least on the surface. Yet when the smoke clears, what remains looks far less like a genuine bid than a self-help exercise.
Citigroup chief executive Jane Fraser manages a team of rivals who might aspire to her job. Competition is healthy but appointing a new president as a deputy could help Fraser deliver the next phase of her growth plan.
It is unusual for a listed company to buy income-bearing securities of a peer as a treasury decision. In orthodox corporate finance, surplus capital is meant to do one of three things: fund projects that clear the hurdle rate, preserve liquidity, or be returned to shareholders. It is not normally redeployed into another company exposed to much the same trade, especially at a lower yield than the investing company pays on its own stock.
Private credit mishaps are coming at us with such speed and intensity that many of the stories are blurring into one. But rather than the private credit crisis dragging banks down, it might give them an opportunity to play offensively in this space.
The easiest way to hide a credit loss is not to deny it. It is to say it has not yet arrived. That was one of the quiet accounting failures exposed by the global financial crisis: losses were often recognised too late, only after the damage was obvious. IFRS 9 was supposed to fix that by forcing lenders to book expected credit losses earlier, using forward-looking judgment rather than waiting for the wreckage.