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<blockquote data-quote="Jake Rickman" data-source="post: 149383" data-attributes="member: 8521"><p>Definitely follow M&A and private equity as topics on the FT. My point about interest rates/inflation also doubly holds because interest rates are almost certainly the biggest driver for both equity and debt capital markets. </p><p></p><p>On the equity side, higher interest rates creates more market uncertainty which can devalue equity shares due to the perceived risk that higher rates will spur on a recession, which leads to lower revenue, higher expenses, and lower profit for most traded companies. Likewise, borrowers are less likely to turn to debt capital markets to raise money from bond proceeds and leveraged loans because higher interest rates directly correlates to higher costs of credit in the form of paying more for interest. This leads to lower volumes of deal activity for banks as book runners and underwriters to the debt issuances.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Jake Rickman, post: 149383, member: 8521"] Definitely follow M&A and private equity as topics on the FT. My point about interest rates/inflation also doubly holds because interest rates are almost certainly the biggest driver for both equity and debt capital markets. On the equity side, higher interest rates creates more market uncertainty which can devalue equity shares due to the perceived risk that higher rates will spur on a recession, which leads to lower revenue, higher expenses, and lower profit for most traded companies. Likewise, borrowers are less likely to turn to debt capital markets to raise money from bond proceeds and leveraged loans because higher interest rates directly correlates to higher costs of credit in the form of paying more for interest. This leads to lower volumes of deal activity for banks as book runners and underwriters to the debt issuances. [/QUOTE]
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