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Credit Agricole Brings Back Floating Samurai Bonds After Decade
Credit Agricole Brings Back Floating Samurai Bonds After Decade

Bloomberg

time3 days ago

  • Business
  • Bloomberg

Credit Agricole Brings Back Floating Samurai Bonds After Decade

Credit Agricole SA is issuing floating-rate Samurai bonds for the first time in about a decade, as it draws strong demand from investors worried about rising Japanese government bond yields. The French bank priced a seven-tranche Samurai bond deal totaling ¥85 billion ($591 million) including a five-year floating-rate tranche that raised ¥26.9 billion, exceeding the ¥16.3 billion offered in the five-year fixed-rate tranche.

CREDIT AGRICOLE S.A. announces redemption of USD 1,500,000,000 Senior Non-Preferred Callable Fixed-to-Floating Rate Notes issued on June 2020 and due June 2026 (ISIN: Rule 144A: US22535WAG24 and Regulation S: US22536PAG63)
CREDIT AGRICOLE S.A. announces redemption of USD 1,500,000,000 Senior Non-Preferred Callable Fixed-to-Floating Rate Notes issued on June 2020 and due June 2026 (ISIN: Rule 144A: US22535WAG24 and Regulation S: US22536PAG63)

Yahoo

time19-05-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

CREDIT AGRICOLE S.A. announces redemption of USD 1,500,000,000 Senior Non-Preferred Callable Fixed-to-Floating Rate Notes issued on June 2020 and due June 2026 (ISIN: Rule 144A: US22535WAG24 and Regulation S: US22536PAG63)

Montrouge, May 19, 2025 CREDIT AGRICOLE S.A. ANNOUNCES REDEMPTION OF USD 1,500,000,000 Senior Non-Preferred Callable Fixed-to-Floating Rate Notes issued on June 16, 2020 (ISIN: Rule 144A: US22535WAG24 and Regulation S: US22536PAG63)* Crédit Agricole S.A. (the 'Issuer') announces today the redemption (the 'Redemption') with effect on June 16, 2025 (the 'Redemption Date') of all of its outstanding USD 1,500,000,000 Senior Non-Preferred Callable Fixed-to-Floating Rate Notes issued on June 16, 2020 (ISIN: Rule 144A: US22535WAG24 and Regulation S: US22536PAG63) (the 'Notes') pursuant to Condition 9(a) (Redemption at the Option of the Issuer) of the terms and conditions of the Notes included in the base offering memorandum dated April 8, 2020, as supplemented by the pricing term sheet dated June 9, 2020 (together, the 'Terms and Conditions'), at the outstanding nominal amount thereof, together with any accrued interest thereon (the 'Redemption Amount'). On the Redemption Date, the Redemption Amount shall become due and payable and, unless the Redemption Amount is improperly withheld or refused, each Note shall cease to bear interest on the Redemption Date. The holders of the Notes will receive formal notice of the Redemption in accordance with the Terms and Conditions. For further information on Crédit Agricole S.A., please see Crédit Agricole S.A.'s website: DISCLAIMER This press release does not constitute an offer to buy or the solicitation of an offer to sell the Notes in the United States of America, Canada, Australia or Japan or in any other jurisdiction. The distribution of this press release in certain jurisdictions may be restricted by law. Persons into whose possession this announcement comes are required to inform themselves about, and to observe, any such restrictions. No communication or information relating to the redemption of the Notes may be distributed to the public in a country where a registration obligation or an approval is required. No action has been or will be taken in any country where such action would be required. The redemption of the Notes may be subject to specific legal and regulatory restrictions in certain jurisdictions; Crédit Agricole S.A. accepts no liability in connection with a breach by any person of such restrictions. This press release is an advertisement; and none of this press release, any notice or any other document or material made public and/or delivered, or which may be made public and/or delivered to the holders of the Notes in connection with the redemption of the Notes is or is intended to be a prospectus for the purposes of Regulation (EU) 2017/1129 of the European Parliament and of the Council dated 14 June 2017 (as amended, the 'Prospectus Regulation'). No prospectus will be published in connection with the redemption of the Notes for the purposes of the Prospectus Regulation. This press release does not, and shall not, in any circumstances, constitute an offer to the public of Notes by Crédit Agricole S.A. nor an invitation to the public in connection with any offer in any jurisdiction, including France. * The ISIN number is included solely for the convenience of the holders of the Notes. No representation is being made as to the correctness or accuracy of the ISIN number either as printed on the Notes or as contained herein and the holder may rely only on the identification numbers printed on its AGRICOLE S.A. PRESS CONTACTAlexandre Barat + 33 1 57 72 12 19 Tassain + 33 1 43 23 25 41 Find our press release on: - Attachment CASA - SNP Call June 2025 - Press releaseError in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

NYC Bankers Who Live in NJ Game Out Commute as Rail Strike Upends RTO Plans
NYC Bankers Who Live in NJ Game Out Commute as Rail Strike Upends RTO Plans

Yahoo

time19-05-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

NYC Bankers Who Live in NJ Game Out Commute as Rail Strike Upends RTO Plans

(Bloomberg) -- The initiative by banks and other employers in New York to bring back workers to the office is being undermined by an unexpected roadblock in a neighboring state. How a Highway Became San Francisco's Newest Park America, 'Nation of Porches' Power-Hungry Data Centers Are Warming Homes in the Nordics Maryland's Credit Rating Gets Downgraded as Governor Blames Trump NJ Transit Train Engineers Strike, Disrupting Travel to NYC As the strike by New Jersey Transit locomotive engineers loomed over Monday's commute, Garden State residents were eager for updates on negotiations as they mulled options for getting to work in Manhattan if trains remain shut down. NJ Transit officials and the union representing its rail engineers said that unscheduled talks Saturday in Newark went well. More talks were being held Sunday. Financial firms including Deutsche Bank AG, Citigroup Inc., Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group Inc., Credit Agricole SA and CastleOak Securities told many of their employees that they could work from home or local offices, according to people familiar with the situations, though traders and some other roles were often exceptions. The leeway offered a partial reprieve from return-to-office policies that were gaining momentum five years after the Covid-19 pandemic upended working patterns. But traveling within the US's most populous metro area promises to be chaotic as long as the walkout continues, and anyone with a pied-à-terre in Manhattan or generous friends or family with a couch to crash on were counting their lucky stars. Shuttered NJ Transit train service has led to jammed buses, light-rail cars and PATH service, as well as surge pricing on Uber, as commuters sought alternatives. Service has also been suspended to MetLife Stadium, creating headaches and enormous ride-share bills for fans of the singer Shakira, who performed Thursday and Friday evenings. 'For some folks, not having a train option and having hundreds of thousands of people try to commute via bus or ferry or car will clog alternate routes,' CastleOak said in a memo to employees. 'We are asking everyone to exercise their best judgment on commuting.' JPMorgan Chase & Co., where Chief Executive Officer Jamie Dimon has been a fierce advocate of in-person work, advised employees to work with managers to figure out strike plans. Anyone who works remotely should log an 'approved working from home - personal circumstance' code, according to a memo sent Friday. One JPMorgan employee who lives in New Jersey, who asked not to be identified because he wasn't authorized to comment publicly, was told by a manager that parking fees wouldn't be covered for those who drove into the office, as he had planned to do. That meant he had to look at alternatives, such as Boxcar — a private bus service that has routes from the state to New York City — something he hadn't considered before. Comments that Dimon made just last week are adding pressure on JPMorgan workers to find a way in. 'I completely applaud your right to not want to go to the office every day, but you're not going to tell JPMorgan what to do,' Dimon said in a Bloomberg Television interview, before the strike started. A JPMorgan representative declined to comment. A resident of upscale Short Hills, New Jersey, who works at hedge fund Millennium booked a Boxcar bus trip to work Monday and will likely stay over at friends in Brooklyn and not go home to his wife and kids to avoid a lengthy back and forth commute each day. In credit markets, where debt sales have roared back to life as tariff tensions ease, banks gave guidance to staff. As of late Friday, Deutsche Bank encouraged those living in New Jersey who are eligible to work from home to do so, according to a person with knowledge of the matter. One MUFG employee who resides in New Jersey said a manager gave permission to work from home. An employee at Credit Agricole got the option to work at home or the bank's NJ office. Representatives for MUFG and Credit Agricole didn't respond to requests for comment. Representatives for Deutsche Bank declined to comment. A representative for CastleOak didn't respond to a request for comment. A Citigroup official said employees whose jobs can be performed remotely didn't need to come into the office during the strike. Danny Wild, a senior coordinator for digital operations at Major League Baseball's Manhattan office, said he was looking forward to the strike to have an excuse to avoid coming into the office from Rockland County, New York, five days a week. He received an email Friday telling him to stay home because of the stoppage. He's loving it for now, but also worried: If the strike continues, his employer has asked workers to consider other options. 'There are no good options,' he said. 'I was humoring myself looking at Uber prices if I wanted to go in: basically $100 plus tax and tip.' Social media had other examples of workers cheering on the strike so they could avoid commuting. In the 10 largest US cities, the number of workers who went to the office was 53% of pre-Covid-19 levels in the week ended May 7, according to data from Kastle Systems. 'I only have to go into the office 2 days per week & I am really praying for a long & protracted NJ Transit rail strike so I can get that down to 0 for as long as possible,' an account with the handle FrankInGeneral posted on X. But those who have gotten used to the post-pandemic rhythm of commuting into the office everyday have been left frustrated. Matt Kritzberg, 24, who works in tech sales and commutes from New Jersey to New York City for his job via NJ Transit trains, says he's concerned about productivity when working from home. 'A huge part of my job is collaborating with people,' he said. 'As someone who's in a new role and who wants to go the extra mile, rather than being the guy who's there five days a week, I'm working from home. It doesn't feel like a good look.' --With assistance from Jeannine Amodeo, Rthvika Suvarna, Gowri Gurumurthy and Nacha Cattan. Why Apple Still Hasn't Cracked AI Microsoft's CEO on How AI Will Remake Every Company, Including His Cartoon Network's Last Gasp DeepSeek's 'Tech Madman' Founder Is Threatening US Dominance in AI Race As Nuclear Power Makes a Comeback, South Korea Emerges a Winner ©2025 Bloomberg L.P.

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