EUR 181,950,000 Class A3b Notes due December 2031 (XS0255438748)
GBP 12,250,000 Class M1a Notes due December 2039 (XS0255424441)
EUR 45,000,000 Class M1b Notes due December 2039 (XS0255439043)
GBP 24,000,000 Class M2a Notes due December 2039 (XS0255425414)
GBP 2,000,000 Class B1a Notes due December 2039 (XS0255425927)
EUR 16,800,000 Class B1b Notes due December 2039 (XS0255440728)
GBP 8,100,000 Class B2a Notes due December 2039 (XS0255426818)
(together, the Series 2006-1 Notes )
GBP 150,000,000 Class A3a Notes due December 2032 (XS0302268361)
EUR 115,500,000 Class A3b Notes due December 2032 (XS0302269096)
GBP 35,000,000 Class AZa Notes due December 2032 (XS0302268445)
GBP 12,000,000 Class M1a Notes due December 2040 (XS0302269682)
EUR 15,500,000 Class M1b Notes due December 2040 (XS0302270854)
The £1bn bitcoin heist organised from Britain dailymail.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from dailymail.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Breakingviews
3 Min Read
An office worker rides up on an escalator inside the 88-story Two IFC in Hong Kong November 28, 2007. Hong Kong s economic growth slowed to 1.7 percent in the third quarter, weaker than expected, as the strongest private consumption in four years was offset by weak government spending and exports.
HONG KONG (Reuters Breakingviews) - There soon may be a little less sunlight in Hong Kong. A new government proposal would curb public access to details about company directors. The idea goes firmly against a worldwide push from investors for better governance and disclosure, and only stands to taint the Asian financial hub’s business standing.
Breakingviews
3 Min Read
An office worker rides up on an escalator inside the 88-story Two IFC in Hong Kong November 28, 2007. Hong Kong s economic growth slowed to 1.7 percent in the third quarter, weaker than expected, as the strongest private consumption in four years was offset by weak government spending and exports.
HONG KONG (Reuters Breakingviews) - There soon may be a little less sunlight in Hong Kong. A new government proposal would curb public access to details about company directors. The idea goes firmly against a worldwide push from investors for better governance and disclosure, and only stands to taint the Asian financial hub’s business standing.