Syndicated Loan Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Syndicated Loan stocks.

Syndicated Loan Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
May 16 MUFG Mitsubishi UFJ (MUFG) Earnings Improve Y/Y in Fiscal 2023
May 16 HSBC Top HSBC Shareholder Ping An Exploring Ways to Cut $13 Billion Stake
May 16 MUFG Mitsubishi UFJ (MUFG) Announces 80M Share Repurchase Plan
May 16 MUFG Mitsubishi UFJ (MUFG) Closes Link Administration Buyout
May 16 HSBC HSBC holder Ping An evaluating ways to reduce its $13B stake - Bloomberg
May 16 HSBC HSBC Equipment Finance joins Acquis Lumia
May 16 MFG Mizuho Financial reports FY results
May 16 MUFG Mitsubishi UFJ Financial GAAP EPS of ¥124.33; initiates FY25 outlook
May 15 HSBC HSBC Announces New Hybrid Checking Account
May 15 HSBC Update: Market Chatter: HSBC Considers Naming Internal Candidate as New CEO
May 15 HSBC Market Chatter: HSBC Considers Naming Internal Candidates as New CEO
May 15 MUFG Mitsubishi UFJ Financial: Staying Positive On Above-Expectations Earnings And ROE
May 15 MUFG Japan's top bank MUFG posts narrower-than-expected Q4 decline
May 15 MFG Japan's Mizuho posts big jump in Q4 profit, forecasts growth ahead
May 15 MFG UPDATE 4-Big Japan banks forecast record profits, signal optimism as domestic rates normalise
May 15 MUFG UPDATE 4-Big Japan banks forecast record profits, signal optimism as domestic rates normalise
May 14 MFG Mizuho Financial FY Earnings Preview
May 14 GLAD Gladstone Capital: Diversified BDC Trading At Attractive Valuation
May 13 HSBC RBC poised to outperform rivals thanks to HSBC deal, say analysts
May 13 MUFG BOJ Cuts Bond Buying in Regular Operation as Yen Stays Weak
Syndicated Loan

A syndicated loan is one that is provided by a group of lenders and is structured, arranged, and administered by one or several commercial banks or investment banks known as lead arrangers.
The syndicated loan market is the dominant way for corporations in the U.S. and Europe to receive loans from banks and other institutional financial capital providers. Financial law often regulates the industry. The U.S. market originated with the large leveraged buyout loans of the mid-1980s, and Europe's market blossomed with the launch of the euro in 1999.
At the most basic level, arrangers serve the investment-banking role of raising investor funding for an issuer in need of capital. The issuer pays the arranger a fee for this service, and this fee increases with the complexity and risk factors of the loan. As a result, the most profitable loans are those to leveraged borrowers—issuers whose credit ratings are speculative grade and who are paying spreads (premiums or margins above the relevant LIBOR in the U.S. and UK, Euribor in Europe or another base rate) sufficient to attract the interest of non-bank term loan investors. Though, this threshold moves up and down depending on market conditions.
In the U.S., corporate borrowers and private equity sponsors fairly even-handedly drive debt issuance. Europe, however, has far less corporate activity and its issuance is dominated by private equity sponsors, who, in turn, determine many of the standards and practices of loan syndication.

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