
Ayai Tomisawa
Articles
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1 week ago |
finance.yahoo.com | Ethan Steinberg |Ayai Tomisawa |Takahiko Hyuga
Unlock stock picks and a broker-level newsfeed that powers Wall Street. Ethan M Steinberg, Ayai Tomisawa and Takahiko Hyuga Thu, May 1, 2025, 10:17 PM 4 min read In This Article: (Bloomberg) -- European and Asian money managers are showing signs of losing some of their appetite for lending to US companies as trade wars heat up, in a potentially worrying sign for corporate America.
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1 week ago |
asreport.americanbanker.com | Ethan Steinberg |Ayai Tomisawa |Takahiko Hyuga
(Bloomberg) -- European and Asian money managers are showing signs of losing some of their appetite for lending to US companies as trade wars heat up, in a potentially worrying sign for corporate America. Investors outside the US turned into net sellers of corporate debt in the first half of April, after US President Donald Trump announced the highest tariffs on foreign countries in more than a century. That's according to data tracking direct flows compiled by Goldman Sachs Group Inc.
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1 week ago |
bloomberg.com | Ethan Steinberg |Ayai Tomisawa |Takahiko Hyuga
In Japan, that calculus works out in favor of domestic corporate credit, according to JPMorgan strategists. (Bloomberg) -- European and Asian money managers are showing signs of losing some of their appetite for lending to US companies as trade wars heat up, in a potentially worrying sign for corporate America.
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1 week ago |
news.bloomberglaw.com | Ethan Steinberg |Ayai Tomisawa |Takahiko Hyuga
European and Asian money managers are showing signs of losing some of their appetite for lending to US companies as trade wars heat up, in a potentially worrying sign for corporate America. Investors outside the US turned into net sellers of corporate debt in the first half of April, after US President Donald Trump announced the highest tariffs on foreign countries in more than a century. That’s according to data tracking direct flows compiled by Goldman Sachs Group Inc.
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1 month ago |
bloomberglinea.com | Ayai Tomisawa |Takahiko Hyuga |Tomohiro Ohsumi
Bloomberg — SoftBank Group Corp. está planeando la mayor venta de bonos para inversores particulares de su historia, incluso cuando los mercados están mostrando aversión al riesgo debido a los aranceles estadounidenses que sacuden los mercados financieros mundiales. La empresa de inversión de Masayoshi Son está emitiendo 600.000 millones de yenes (US$4.100 millones) de bonos a cinco años para inversores particulares, según una presentación.
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