This is Test Post 2 – Category: Boardroom Intelligence – Tags: Accessing Capital Markets / Deals / Venture Capital
Accessing Capital Markets
Recent Posts
The United States: The Global Leader in Climate Intervention Research The US is currently the only country deploying aircraft into the stratosphere for climate research. SRM projects have bipartisan support in Congress, though budgets remain in the single-digit-million-dollar range. In 2020, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) established the Earth’s Radiation Budget (ERB), a
In July, Jefferies’ Private Capital Advisory team released its mid-year review of the secondary market, consolidating discussions, surveys, and research from the market’s biggest and most influential limited partners, general partners, and secondary buyers. This report follows Jefferies’ H2 2023 secondary market review, which predicted near-record secondary volume, higher LP pricing, and a sustained capital […]
To better understand Canada’s growth story, we asked John Manley – the new Chairman of Jefferies Canada and a former Deputy Prime Minister with a decorated career in law, business and public service – to share his thoughts.
January 2024 Quarterly Insights
Performing Issuers should take advantage of the strong market window
Issuers should take advantage of strong technicals and robust investor demand to pursue a variety of opportunistic transactions including refinancings, repricings, and dividend deals.
Philip Noblet, Head of UK and Ireland Investment Banking at Jefferies, discusses October inflation data and its potential impact on dealmaking.
At Tech Trek 2023, Ben Langworthy dives deep into current dealmaking trends, economic resilience, and effective investment strategies in turbulent markets.
Three major issues that should be on the mind of decision makers’ as they prepare for next year are: Regulatory scrutiny, counterparty risks and new launch landscapes.
It is common for highly levered sponsor-backed companies with liquidity needs and/or upcoming maturities to engage in liability management exercises, which often includes creating a new priming tranche of secured debt (an “Uptier”) or transferring assets out of the secured collateral package (a “Drop Down”).