SES launches 750 mln euro in unsecured notes

Luxembourg’s SES SA, which likes to describe itself as the world’s only multi-orbit satellite player, has announced the successful launch of senior unsecured fixed rates due 2029 for a total amount of 750 billion euro.

The seven-year notes bear a coupon of 3.50 percent and were priced at 99.725 percent of their nominal value, representing a credit spread of 175 basis points and a yield-to-maturity of 3.55 percent.

ECB flags July hike, hedges medium-term policy bets

The European Central Bank now is convinced that it will raise its benchmark eurozone interest rate at its 21 July monetary policy meeting and said it expects that its interest rates will no longer be negative by September. Its latest statement also indicates that the ECB is hedging its bets for upcoming medium-term policy moves in order to to add to its flexibility to act. 

Savers to lose ‘hundreds of billions’, Betterfinance warns

A Brussels-based group standing up for European users of financial services has warned that European savers and investors in long-term savings and pension products face a particularly sharp erosion of purchasing power as a result of rising prices.

Speaking about “financial repression”, Betterfinance, one of two EU-level consumer finance NGOs that regularly interact with the European Commission, said European savers are set to lose “hundreds of billions of euro” in purchasing power in 2022 alone.

Lagarde's roadmap for rates draws a mixed response

As inflation persists across Europe, with double-digit numbers for some eurozone countries, ECB President Christine Lagarde’s road map for upcoming interest rates hikes drew a mixed response in the markets.

The European Central Bank on Thursday, in no hurry to raise interest rates while inflation pressures continue to build, took another small step on its journey  towards higher eurozone benchmark rate as Lagarde repeatedly underlined the need for flexibility in the bank’s monetary policy.

Esma study questions added value of active management

Active management of investment funds is no guarantee for outperformance during volatile times in financial markets, according to a new study presented on Monday by Europe’s top financial markets authority. “There is low ability to generate sustained positive alpha, especially for larger funds,” it said.

ECB creates 'optionalities' to deal with uncertainty

The European Central Bank on Thursday opened the doors to a potential eurozone rate hike in the second half of this year as it brought forward the end of its asset purchasing programme to the summer, but at the same time it made clear that it would keep open its option to renew the programme if economic conditions worsen because of the war in Ukraine and sanctions against Russia.