Malaysia's Petronas buys Statoil's 15.5% interest in an oil field in Azerbaijan for $2.2b, its third largest acquisition.
The power unit of China's largest producer of nuclear energy has successfully floated its shares. Retail demand was particularly strong.
Zhejiang’s largest power generator raises the first bond from a Chinese provincial government, riding on China’s better-than-expected manufacturing data.
The Russian gas company visits Hong Kong to explain its Asia strategy as the West tightens the screw on corporate Russia.
Foreign banks and investors haven't struck pay dirt with Sinopec's $17.4 billion retail unit stake sale.
David Tendian, CFO of the Indonesian coal miner, tells FinanceAsia he does not fear the political transition in terms of mining taxes.
Asia’s largest oil refiner sells a 29.99% stake in its retail unit to 25 investors for Rmb107.094 billion in cash.
Sharia-compliant deal comes back with different set of banks and better terms.
Offshore support services provider begins roadshows for the deal, which is being pitched on a range of S$194 million to S$230 million.
Objektif Bersatu, the main shareholder of the Malaysian oilfield services provider, divests stake to subscribe to the rights offering.
Singapore's EZRA Holdings sets sail with plans to raise up to $250 million from a domestic offering of shares in associate company EOC Ltd.
Indonesian oil and gas producer postpones Singapore IPO to await better market conditions.
Blackstone and Tamarind talk to FinanceAsia about M&A openings created by North American oil & gas giants retreating from the region.
Indonesian group hopes to become Southeast Asia's largest energy company on the Singapore Stock Exchange.
Equity analysts are scouring China’s reform plans to unearth potential beneficiaries. The swelling list so far includes the likes of China Telecom, Sinopharm and CNBM.
Oil India's bid for Shell’s assets in Nigeria was thwarted but it remains on the lookout for producing assets.
An abundant source of domestic energy is obviously appealing to policymakers in Beijing, but China is still years away from exploiting the opportunity.
The Korean power company takes advantage of pent-up investor demand, pricing new five-year bond at a small 10bp premium to existing curve.
Choice of targeted club deal reflects jittery market environment, and bankers say they expect more such deals as sellers seek alternative ways to achieve better pricing.
The engineering and utility company sets the price at the top of the range and allocates the majority of the institutional tranche to domestic investors.