In addition to raising a total of $ 22.6 billion in high - grade bonds for Apple and T - Mobile USA last year, Deutsche served as the go - to bookrunner for the multibillion -
dollar bonds deals of Italy, Spain other beleaguered European governments — and even the European Financial Stability Facility.
Not exact matches
Asset managers say they've seen a notable number of companies fail to close
dollar - denominated
bond deals of late.
Drummond suggests that no matter how the Americans
deal with the debt, it could throw Canada into a double - dip recession: «It could be a lose - lose, because if they
deal with it in a draconian fashion, then they'll kill off the recovery, but if they don't
deal with it at all, they're going to see lower U.S. growth, drive down the U.S.
dollar, raise the
bond premiums — and that would be a disaster for Canada.»
Late last month, chemical company Altice had to cut back a
bond offering and increase the interest rate to 11 % on a portion of a multi-billion
dollar deal.
To survive, Ganti says, money managers should look beyond the multitrillion -
dollar stock exchanges,
bond - trading platforms, and big
deals backed by private equity and venture capital.
Investors are hungry for high quality, multibillion -
dollar debt
deals, as shown by Anheuser - Busch InBev Finance Inc. of Belgium's success with two corporate
bonds totaling more than $ 60 billion in 2016.
And so we see this sort of pyramid where when you're going to play around with currencies you're
dealing with several trillion
dollars moving around every day and then you move up to the
bonds and it's smaller and the equities are considerably smaller.
Gov.
Deal has overseen three balanced budgets without raising taxes, saved millions of taxpayer
dollars by maintaining Georgia's AAA
bond rating, and increased our rainy day fund by more than 500 %.
His point was that in the
bond market, since a large proportion of the
dollar value of transactions came from new issues, those
deals in the primary markets were a good indication of where trades should go on in the secondary market for similar pieces of paper.
For instance, I'm looking at some of the things and what Mitch just mentioned so, you are
dealing with a portfolio of high yield corporate
bonds, U.S.
dollar emerging market
bonds, intermediate corporate, small cap, as you said, an all - world ex small cap, developed market stocks, emerging market stocks, high dividend yield stocks, REITs, Vanguard's Total Stock Market Index is in there as well.
For a single
bond this isn't a big
deal but if hundreds of thousands of
dollars have been invested in a
bond mutual fund and interest rates sharply spike over a few years than the initial capital could drop by double digit percentages.
No esoteric «human» decision process (no buying of oversized positions compared to other asset holdings (such as KO in the 90's), no shorting of the
dollar (early 2000's), no buying of oil stocks at a $ 120 oil price, no backroom «
deals» involving
bonds and preferreds during times of crisis.