SpaceX plans retail-heavy cargo for mammoth IPO
SpaceX expects to begin marketing its blockbuster IPO on June 8 and is planning to include retail investors as a significant component of the offering, company management outlined in a kick-off meeting with its banks, people familiar with the process told IFR.
Investors take glass-half-full view in credit markets
Tight pricing. Relatively big books. Risky deal structures. It was almost as if the war in the Middle East was over judging by some of the new bond issues in the second half of the week as issuers took advantage of a window that unexpectedly emerged as a two-week ceasefire began.
Staying the course? Hong Kong's long IPO queue raises questions
Hong Kong's long IPO application queue raises the question of how long issuers will be able to wait to raise funds and whether they will turn their attention to other listing venues.
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.
It’s going to be another great quarter for investment bank results. Analysts are expecting strength in ECM, DCM, lending and fixed income trading, and equity trading may top them all, with expectations high for record revenue.
Singapore Telecommunications is removing the unique features of a class of shares created at its privatisation three decades ago when the government tried to engage Singaporeans to invest in the stock market.
Bernstein plans to deepen its research coverage as its equities joint venture with Societe Generale enters a new phase after two years of operation, with the expanded tie-up supporting a buildout of the French bank's equity capital markets business, senior executives said.
JP Morgan chief executive Jamie Dimon took aim at "nonsensical" 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, calling parts of new capital rules wrong and "un-American".
A ceasefire may be in place between the US, Israel and Iran but the impact of the nearly six-week conflict in the Middle East will be felt by many sovereigns, particularly oil and gas importers, for some considerable time more, according to the International Monetary Fund.
Tight pricing. Relatively big books. Risky deal structures. It was almost as if the war in the Middle East was over judging by some of the new bond issues in the second half of the week as issuers took advantage of a window that unexpectedly emerged as a two-week ceasefire began.
Issuers from the Middle East and North Africa are opting to fund through private placements as an uncertain ceasefire agreement continues to keep public deals on hold.
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 Democratic Republic of the Congo raised more than it initially intended on Thursday with a US$1.25bn dual-tranche transaction as it finally achieved its goal of issuing in the international markets.
The World Bank has stepped up its revived programme of Italian retail investor-targeted borrowing with its debut transaction through UniCredit. The Triple A rated development lender, which sourced lightly structured deals as large as US$668m and US$397m in the country during the 2010s, passing US$1bn in 2016 alone, issued €21.386m of fixed-rate callable notes through the Italian/German bank.
US securitisation participants expect solid dealflow in the second quarter, even though the war in Iran that erupted six weeks ago has kept financial markets on edge.
European securitisation markets are showing early signs of a post-Easter revival, with a debut transaction from Advanzia Bank reopening primary markets, market participants said. =
KKR hit the commercial mortgage-backed security market last week to refinance an office tower in San Francisco that was once the headquarters for Dropbox, which has vacated the premises and been replaced by a roster of other corporate tenants.
South Africa’s FirstRand Group has leapfrogged multilateral development and commercial banks by becoming the first market player to replicate the World Bank’s outcome bond structure .
Sustainable finance will play a central role in raising hundreds of billions of pounds of private capital over the next decade to fund the UK government's ambitious growth and infrastructure plans and help meet its net-zero targets.
Global tech hyperscalers are exploring voluntary nature and biodiversity credits in the UK and Europe to offset the environmental impact of data centres, as well as mandatory credits to meet the UK's Biodiversity Net Gain regulation.
The World Bank has stepped up its revived programme of Italian retail investor-targeted borrowing with its debut transaction through UniCredit. The Triple A rated development lender, which sourced lightly structured deals as large as US$668m and US$397m in the country during the 2010s, passing US$1bn in 2016 alone, issued €21.386m of fixed-rate callable notes through the Italian/German bank.
SpaceX expects to begin marketing its blockbuster IPO on June 8 and is planning to include retail investors as a significant component of the offering, company management outlined in a kick-off meeting with its banks, people familiar with the process told IFR.
ECM bankers are rushing to seize the window created by the initial two-week ceasefire agreement between the US, Israel and Iran, bringing deals last week that totalled US$3.2bn.
Hong Kong's long IPO application queue raises the question of how long issuers will be able to wait to raise funds and whether they will turn their attention to other listing venues.
The US$75bn IPO of Elon Musk’s SpaceX in June is expected to crowd out other listings in the US for at least a couple of weeks, but bankers are pondering the consequences of an unprecedented deal on what they have planned in Europe thousands of miles away.
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.
The prospect of a windfall in leveraged loan issuance tied to leveraged buyouts has failed to materialise as the US war with Iran drags on, injecting fresh volatility into credit markets and dampening risk appetite for new deals.
Direct lenders are preparing to gather for an annual private credit conference at a critical moment for the industry, as retail investors seek to pull large sums of capital from the asset class and some fund managers cap share redemptions.
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.
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.