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Report: Stripe eyeing blockbuster IPO
Online grocer Thrive Market also considering an IPO; India food delivery firm Zomato sets IPO price 3 minutes read Payments provider Stripe has reportedly hired an advisor that could lead it to a public stock offering by next year. (Photo: Shutterstock)
Stock-related information surrounding three of the biggest names in their segments populated the news cycle on Thursday as word of public stock offerings for all three came to light.
According to multiple reports, online payments firm Stripe and online grocery Thrive Markets are mulling initial public offerings (IPO) while Zomato, the largest India-based food-delivery company, said it would go public next week in India with a valuation up to $7.98 billion, setting a per share price range of 96 cents to $1.02.
Ireland’s strong growth provides the government with some of the highest potential in the euro area to reverse excess crisis-related borrowing, with debt as a share of the underlying economy to return to 2019 levels after 2026 absent significant shocks.
Before the pandemic, elite names were mostly missing from the pioneering ranks of sovereign ESG debt issuers. A year later, the menu of committed issuers is far broader and innovations are emerging
France was the only G7 nation to have issued green bonds prior to the onset of the coronavirus crisis, putting it among a mixed group that ranged from Egypt, Fiji, Hong Kong and Nigeria to a number of smaller EU states.
Now, however, much of the G7 has endorsed green bonds, with Germany’s €7.5bn debut in May 2020 the pivotal moment. Italy too has issued its first deal in the format, while both Canada and the UK are readying their entries into the market.
(Updates with confirmation of sale; changes source to NTMA, adds quote)
DUBLIN, April 15 (Reuters) - Ireland raised 3.5 billion euros from the sale of a new 20-year bond on Thursday, the country’s debt agency said, in the latest long-dated issuance from a euro zone sovereign.
That is slightly higher than the 2 billion to 3 billion euro target a source indicated to Reuters on Wednesday, with the deal receiving final investor demand of more than 35 billion euros.
The funds were raised at a yield of 0.585%, the National Treasury Management Agency (NTMA) said in a statement.
Ireland has now raised 10.5 billion euros in 2021, more than half of which came via its first syndicated sale of the year, a 10-year deal investors piled into in January when the order book was in excess of 40 billion euros.