Arts & crafts chain Michaels preps bond deal after rebound
Michaels is back in the US high-yield market after a long hiatus as the Apollo-backed arts and crafts store takes advantage of a rally in its bonds to pay upcoming debt maturities, cleaning up its capital structure ahead of an expected IPO in coming years.
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.
JP Morgan has tapped Catherine O’Donnell as the new head of North America leveraged finance, as the investment bank rejiggers its leveraged finance leadership team, according to a Tuesday memo obtained by LPC.
Greece has joined the club of SSAs probing digital bonds with a simulated security running on distributed ledger technology.
Analysis by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision has concluded that the growing synthetic risk transfer markets, which are estimated at €750bn across the euro area, UK, US and Canada, pose lower risks than credit securitisation initiatives carried out before the 2008 financial crisis.
Michaels is back in the US high-yield market after a long hiatus as the Apollo-backed arts and crafts store takes advantage of a rally in its bonds to pay upcoming debt maturities, cleaning up its capital structure ahead of an expected IPO in coming years.
Flemish Community took record size thanks to a big order book for its new long 10-year issuance on Wednesday.
US telecoms company Verizon Communications was back in the European hybrid market on Wednesday with euro and sterling subordinated deals, a cookie cutter of its November hybrid debut.
Undeterred by a softer market backdrop and widening in long-end spreads, NatWest Group launched a €750m 11-year non-call 10 green holdco senior bond offering on Wednesday and secured its target price of 100bp, though demand more than halved from peak levels.
Analysis by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision has concluded that the growing synthetic risk transfer markets, which are estimated at €750bn across the euro area, UK, US and Canada, pose lower risks than credit securitisation initiatives carried out before the 2008 financial crisis.
The UK’s Financial Conduct Authority is planning public consultations that could lead to an easing in the reporting and due diligence requirements in the securitisation market, according to people familiar with the matter, as the watchdog moves to finetune its post-Brexit securitisation regime.
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.
The UK will meet institutional investors this week ahead of issuing its first green Gilt with potential nuclear use of proceeds. The Debt Management Office, which followed the leads of G7 peers Canada, France and Japan in November by making nuclear an eligible area of expenditure under its updated “government green financing framework” , has invited institutions to one-on-one meetings with officials on Wednesday and Thursday.
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.
Western Digital raised US$3.17bn late Tuesday from a secondary sale of stock in Sandisk, the flash-memory unit it spun off in February 2025, nearly a decade after purchasing the company in 2016.
Compass Pathways is seeking to raise US$150m through a marketed follow-on sale of stock to bridge liquidity ahead of a potential regulatory approval of its psychedelic treatment for depression.
Robinhood Markets is seeking to raise US$1bn from a closed-end fund designed to invest in private companies, broadening access to retail investors ahead of what could be one of the biggest IPO cycles in capital markets history.
Demand was strong enough for a £77m primary accelerated bookbuild for London and Johannesburg-listed Sirius Real Estate to price the 5% capital raise at a premium on Monday evening.
Investment-grade term loan issuance in January surged with corporates demonstrating their appetite for dealmaking as the second administration under president Donald Trump enters its sophomore year.
Fundraising among direct lenders has surged to record levels with many firms pushing into larger mid-market deals, but Franklin Templeton is charting a different course — doubling down on the lower mid-market segment of European direct lending.
KKR is handing over the keys of Accell to the company's lenders, with the Dutch bicycle manufacturer set to engage in a significant debt reduction and receive additional funding, Accell announced on Wednesday.
India has eased the external commercial borrowing rules by raising the borrowing limits and removing the pricing cap, a move expected to make offshore funding significantly easier for domestic corporates.
Utility firm Portland General Electric has commitments for an unsecured US$1.9bn 364-day bridge loan in place to support its approximately US$1.9bn acquisition of Washington state generation, transmission and electric utility operations from PacifCorp.
Winters' 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
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