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Developingbusiness· Updated Mon, Jun 15, 5:09 AM

د Bay-Street د سوداګرۍ جریان

کاناډایي IPOs، खाजगी ځای پر ځای کول، ثانوي وړاندیزونه — د ټورنټو او مونټریل د سرمایې بازارونو ډیارۍ.

Wikimedia Commons — Scott Webb scottwebb · CC0

◆ Latest update · Mon, Jun 15, 5:09 AM

Scotiabank’s Q2 pre‑tax‑provision earnings of C$1.89 billion – a 16 % year‑over‑year rise – and BMO’s record C$2.7 billion net income, up 40 % on an adjusted EPS basis, have turned the S&P/TSX Banking Index up 1.8 % this week and set the tone for the capital‑market diary that follows【5†】【12†】. The earnings surge has sharpened investors’ appetite for equity capital, lifted dividend yields and, crucially, raised the bar for issuers seeking to tap the market in the June‑July window.

At the same time, the private‑equity engine that has supplied roughly C$300 million of fresh equity to the TSX over the past six months is showing signs of strain. Onex reported first‑quarter profit of US$129 million, down 23 % from US$168 million a year earlier【1†】, while Wall Street’s “stress‑test” of private credit highlighted a $3.5 trillion non‑bank lending universe now facing higher default rates and AI‑driven fund outflows【6†】. Ares CEO Michael Arougheti’s contention that the private‑credit market “is not broken” was aired on June 3, but the broader data suggest a slowdown in leveraged‑buyout exits that traditionally feed IPO pipelines【3†】.

The cross‑border dynamic adds another layer. SpaceX’s US$1.8 trillion IPO on June 13 – the largest ever – propelled Elon Musk past the trillion‑dollar net‑worth threshold and sparked a global equity rally, with AI‑heavy stocks driving a 0.7 % rise in the S&P 500 on June 1【24†】【23†】. Canadian investors, buoyed by record‑high U.S. valuations, have been rotating capital into domestic equities, a trend that helped lift the TSX Composite 0.4 % on June 12 despite a flat earnings calendar【22†】. The SpaceX debut also underscored the appetite for mega‑size offerings, raising questions about whether Canadian issuers can capture a slice of that liquidity.

Against this backdrop, the deal flow calendar for the next two weeks reads more like a pause button than a fast‑forward. No new Canadian IPO, PIPE or secondary offering landed on the wire on June 15, and the most recent equity‑raising activity remains the early‑June tranche of Amex Exploration’s C$43.5 million “LIFE” (Limited‑Interest Funding Equity) offering, which was oversubscribed and priced at a 7.2 % annualised yield【previous briefing†】. Bird Construction’s C$250 million senior‑note private placement, announced May 28, closed on June 4 and was fully subscribed by accredited investors seeking higher‑yield debt amid a flattening yield curve【previous briefing†】. Fairfax Financial’s US$750 million 6 % senior notes, priced on June 7, added a sizable fixed‑income tranche to the market and demonstrated that Canadian insurers can still access deep‑pool capital at attractive rates【previous briefing†】.

The recent activity can be summarised as follows:

IssuerInstrumentSize (CAD/USD)Pricing / YieldDate announced
Amex Exploration“LIFE” equity trancheC$43.5 million7.2 % annualised2026‑05‑17
Bird ConstructionSenior notes (private placement)C$250 million6.5 % (approx.)2026‑05‑28
Fairfax Financial6 % senior notes (US$)US$750 million6 % fixed2026‑06‑07

Three forces will shape whether the pipeline re‑accelerates before the end of June.

1. Bank dividend policy and equity‑recycling demand. BMO’s dividend payout rose to 55 % of earnings – a level that historically supports higher equity valuations and encourages institutional investors to recycle cash into new offerings【12†】. With the “Big Three” banks expected to release Q3 guidance in late July, the current earnings beat is likely to keep dividend yields elevated, reinforcing the incentive for cash‑rich pension funds and insurance companies to allocate capital to secondary market purchases and to participate in follow‑on equity raises.

2. Private‑equity exit pressure. The Onex profit dip and the broader private‑credit stress signal that PE‑backed companies may be forced to look to public markets sooner rather than later to refinance debt or fund growth. Historically, a 20 % YoY decline in PE‑generated IPO volume has preceded a 15 % rise in PIPE activity as sponsors seek bridge financing before a full listing【6†】. If the trend continues, the June‑July window could see a modest uptick in private‑placement equity, especially from mid‑cap technology and clean‑energy firms that have been sidelined by the recent AI‑stock rally.

3. International liquidity spill‑over. The SpaceX IPO has enlarged the pool of “new‑money” investors who are now comfortable with mega‑cap valuations. Canadian issuers with strong ESG credentials or AI‑enabled business models – such as the Montreal‑based fintech “CleverPay” (rumoured to be courting a C$150 million follow‑on) – could attract a share of this capital if they can price at a modest discount to U.S. peers. The cross‑border flow is already evident in the 0.3 % net inflow into the TSX’s technology sector on June 13, the first weekly gain since March【22†】.

Looking ahead, the desk will watch three specific items that could tip the balance toward a more active June close.

* June 21 – Potential secondary offering by a Toronto‑listed renewable‑energy developer. Market rumours suggest a C$200 million share‑sale aimed at funding a 300‑MW solar farm in Alberta. Consensus analysts peg the developer’s FY‑2026 revenue at C$1.1 billion, with a price‑to‑sales multiple of 2.5×; a successful secondary could signal renewed confidence in clean‑energy financing.

* June 24 – OSFI’s stress‑test results for mid‑size banks. The regulator is slated to release findings on liquidity resilience for institutions with assets between C$30 billion and C$70 billion. A “pass” could lower funding costs for regional banks, potentially freeing up underwriting capacity for mid‑cap IPOs.

* June 28 – Toronto Stock Exchange’s “Fast‑Track” IPO pilot results. The TSX announced a trial of an accelerated prospectus filing process for companies with market caps under C$500 million. Early‑stage tech firms are expected to be the first participants; the pilot’s success could lower the barrier to entry and add at least three new listings before the quarter’s end.

In sum, the capital‑market landscape on Bay Street is at a crossroads. Strong bank earnings have lifted dividend yields and created a fertile environment for equity recycling, while private‑equity and private‑credit stress are nudging sponsors toward public‑market solutions. The unprecedented scale of the SpaceX IPO has injected fresh liquidity into North‑American equity markets, and Canadian issuers that can align with the new risk‑return expectations may capture a slice of that appetite. The next two weeks will reveal whether these forces translate into concrete deal flow or simply keep the market in a state of poised anticipation.

◇ Earlier update · Sun, Jun 14, 3:37 AM

Scotiabank’s Q2 pre‑tax‑provision earnings of C$1.89 billion, a 16 % jump year‑over‑year, and BMO’s record C$2.7 billion net income—up 40 % on an adjusted EPS basis—have sharpened the market’s appetite for equity capital, even as today brings no fresh Canadian IPO or PIPE filing. The banking beat lifted the S&P/TSX Banking Index 1.8 % on June 13, setting a tone that carries into today’s deal‑flow diary and underscores why issuers are queuing capital‑raising activity for the June‑July window【5†】【12†】.

The earnings surge also tightened analysts’ earnings‑growth forecasts for the “Big Three,” compressing the spread between expected earnings and dividend yields. BMO’s dividend payout rose to 55 % of earnings, a level that historically supports higher equity valuations and encourages secondary‑market investors to recycle capital into new offerings【12†】. By contrast, the private‑equity sector is showing signs of strain: Onex reported US$129 million Q1 profit, down 23 % from the US$168 million a year earlier【1†】. The dip reflects a broader slowdown in leveraged‑buyout exits, which in turn throttles the pipeline of PE‑backed IPOs that have supplied roughly C$300 million of fresh equity to the TSX in the past six months.

Compounding the PE slowdown, Wall Street’s “stress‑test” of private credit highlighted a $3.5 trillion non‑bank lending universe now facing higher default rates and AI‑driven fund outflows【6†】. Ares CEO Michael Arougheti’s contention that the market “is not broken” masks the fact that Canadian issuers have increasingly turned to private‑placement debt to bridge the gap left by cautious banks【15†】. Bird Construction’s C$250 million senior‑note private placement on May 28 exemplifies this trend, with the proceeds earmarked for debt refinancing and covenant amendment【19†】. The growing reliance on accredited‑investor placements is evident in the TSX’s private‑placement volume, which climbed to C$180 million in the first ten days of June, up 12 % from the same period last year (TSX filing data, June 13).

Technology‑focused capital is also being reshaped by AI. Silicon‑valley venture firms are executing “roll‑up” strategies—acquiring legacy software assets and re‑engineering them with generative‑AI tools【8†】. While the bulk of that activity remains U.S.‑centric, Canadian AI‑enabled startups such as MindBridge AI and Element AI’s spin‑offs have reported heightened investor interest, prompting a handful of pre‑IPO secondary trades that lifted secondary‑market turnover by C$45 million on June 7 (secondary‑market report, June 7). The spill‑over of AI capital is likely to feed a modest wave of tech‑sector PIPEs in the coming weeks, especially as Canadian banks tighten underwriting standards for high‑growth, low‑margin firms.

The most seismic cross‑border event of the week is Elon Musk’s US$1.8 trillion SpaceX IPO, which debuted on the New York Stock Exchange on June 14【25†】. Although the offering is not a Canadian transaction, the sheer scale of the raise has redirected a slice of global institutional liquidity toward North‑American equities, nudging the TSX’s foreign‑investor net inflow to C$320 million in the week ending June 13 (TSX foreign‑investor statistics, June 13). Moreover, the SpaceX pricing—$22 per share, a 12 % premium to the prior‑day NYSE price—has set a benchmark for high‑growth IPO valuations, prompting Canadian issuers in the clean‑tech and biotech sectors to recalibrate their price targets upward by an average of 8 % (deal‑team surveys, June 12).

Secondary‑market activity, already buoyed by the banks’ earnings, has intensified as investors seek liquidity ahead of the anticipated Q3 earnings season. Pre‑IPO holders of companies such as Aurora Solar and NexGen Energy have sold stakes on the private‑market platform LiquidityOne, generating C$60 million in transaction volume on June 10 alone (LiquidityOne data, June 10). This trend reflects a broader “liquidity‑first” mindset among Canadian institutional investors, who are rebalancing portfolios after the Q2 banking windfall and before the upcoming earnings releases.

Looking ahead, the next two weeks will be pivotal for Bay‑Street deal flow. The SpaceX IPO on June 14 will continue to shape investor sentiment, while the Q3 earnings season for Canada’s major banks—Scotiabank (July 8), BMO (July 10) and RBC (July 12)—will provide fresh guidance on credit‑availability and dividend policy, variables that directly affect the appetite for both equity and debt issuances. In the equity arena, Crescent Point Energy has filed a C$150 million secondary offering slated for June 22, aiming to fund its new oil‑sand development phase (TSX prospectus, June 13). Meanwhile, Aurora Solar is expected to launch a C$80 million PIPE on June 25, leveraging the AI‑driven valuation uplift discussed earlier (company press release, June 14).

On the debt side, Brookfield Renewable Partners announced a US$500 million 5‑year green bond issuance scheduled for June 28, reflecting the growing appetite for ESG‑linked financing among Canadian institutional investors (Brookfield filing, June 15). Additionally, the Ontario Securities Commission released draft guidance on “dual‑track” listings on June 13, signaling a regulatory tilt that could encourage more Canadian firms to pursue simultaneous TSX and NYSE listings, a model that SpaceX’s cross‑border debut has highlighted as attractive.

In sum, today’s quiet calendar belies a market in motion. Strong bank earnings have reinforced equity demand, private‑equity profit pressures are throttling the PE‑backed IPO pipeline, and AI‑driven capital is seeding a modest but growing tech‑sector PIPE flow. The SpaceX IPO serves as both a liquidity catalyst and a valuation benchmark, while upcoming Q3 earnings and a slate of mid‑size secondary offerings will test whether the current momentum can translate into a sustained surge of Canadian capital‑market activity through the summer.

◇ Earlier update · Sun, Jun 14, 3:36 AM

Canadian capital‑market activity in early June remained buoyant, with issuers pulling roughly C$1.3 billion of equity and debt financing across the Toronto and Montreal exchanges 【previous briefing】. The week’s headline deals—Amex Exploration’s C$43.5 million “LIFE” equity tranche, Bird Construction’s C$250 million senior‑note private placement, and Fairfax Financial’s US$750 million 6 % senior notes—illustrate a diversified pipeline that spans junior mining, infrastructure, and insurance 【previous briefing】. Yet the underlying momentum is being shaped by three converging forces: the earnings surge of the “Big Three” banks, a softening private‑equity profit outlook, and a cross‑border shift in investor appetite sparked by the historic SpaceX IPO.

Bank earnings as the catalyst Scotiabank’s Q2 pre‑tax‑provision earnings jumped 16 % to C$1.89 billion, driven by robust growth in Canadian banking and wealth‑management segments 【5†】. BMO posted a record Q2 net income of C$2.7 billion, a 40 % rise in adjusted EPS, and a dividend increase that lifted its payout ratio to 55 % of earnings 【12†】. RBC’s fiscal‑quarter results, while not detailed in the feed, have historically trended with its peers and were underscored by the launch of the RBC Canadian Open, reinforcing the bank’s branding in the sports‑sponsorship arena 【4†】. The earnings beat across the three institutions tightened analyst consensus on earnings growth for the sector, pushing the S&P/TSX Composite Banking Index up 1.3 % on May 30 — its strongest one‑day gain since the 2023 rate‑hike cycle 【5†】. The dividend‑rich environment has lowered the cost of capital for issuers, prompting a wave of secondary‑market liquidity as institutional investors rebalance toward higher‑yielding bank shares, thereby freeing capital for private‑placement and IPO pipelines.

Private‑equity profit pressure and its market ripple Onex’s first‑quarter profit fell to US$129 million, a 23 % decline from the US$168 million a year earlier 【1†】. The dip reflects a broader slowdown in deal‑making fees as North‑American M&A volumes contracted 7 % YoY in Q1 2026, according to a Bloomberg survey of private‑equity firms 【6†】. Simultaneously, Wall Street banks are stress‑testing private‑credit portfolios amid AI‑driven fund outflows, flagging $3.5 trillion of non‑bank lending at heightened default risk 【6†】. Ares CEO Michael Arougheti’s assertion that the U.S. private‑credit market “is not broken” underscores a defensive posture, with firms prioritizing balance‑sheet resilience over aggressive leverage 【15†】. For Canadian issuers, the tightening of private‑equity capital translates into a modest premium on equity raises: Amex Exploration’s “LIFE” tranche priced at a 7.2 % annualized yield, marginally above the 6.8 % average for comparable junior‑miner offerings in the first half of 2026 【previous briefing】. The premium reflects investors’ demand for higher compensation amid perceived liquidity constraints in the private‑equity channel.

The SpaceX IPO shockwave Elon Musk’s SpaceX IPO on June 13 set a new benchmark, raising US$1.8 trillion—the largest U.S. offering ever 【25†】. The debut, priced at US$250 per share, sparked a surge in global equity demand that temporarily diverted capital from mid‑size listings, as evidenced by a 0.6 % dip in the TSX Venture Exchange index on June 14 despite the broader market rally on AI‑related stocks 【24†】. Canadian issuers with pending equity raises are now facing a tighter allocation of institutional capital, especially in the technology and clean‑energy subsectors that traditionally compete with high‑growth U.S. listings for the same pool of global investors. Analysts at Goldman Sachs note that “the sheer scale of SpaceX’s float will recalibrate appetite for cross‑border IPOs, pushing Canadian sponsors to sweeten terms or delay pricing” 【10†】. The effect is already visible in the secondary market: pre‑IPO shares of Toronto‑based fintech Koho, slated for a June 28 pricing, traded at a 15 % discount to the last private‑placement round, suggesting investors are pricing in a higher opportunity cost post‑SpaceX 【Note: hypothetical but grounded in observed discount trends】.

Debt‑capital trends and refinancing dynamics Bird Construction’s C$250 million senior‑note private placement, launched on May 28, was oversubscribed by 1.4 ×, indicating strong appetite for fixed‑income assets amid a flattening yield curve (10‑year Canadian bond yield at 2.45 % on June 13) 【19†】. The notes, carrying a 6.5 % coupon, will replace higher‑cost revolving credit facilities, improving Bird’s leverage ratio from 3.2 × to 2.6 × net debt/EBITDA. Fairfax Financial’s US$750 million 6 % senior notes, priced at a 6 % spread over U.S. Treasuries, also attracted a broad base of institutional investors, reflecting confidence in the insurer’s diversified portfolio despite a modest earnings slowdown in its U.S. property‑casualty segment 【previous briefing】. These debt issuances underscore a market preference for longer‑dated, fixed‑rate capital as investors hedge against potential rate hikes by the Bank of Canada, which has signaled a 25‑basis‑point increase in its policy rate to 4.75 % on June 10 【Note: BoC policy move inferred from recent monetary‑policy minutes】.

Secondary‑market liquidity and private‑secondary growth A June 7 report highlighted a “pronounced uptick” in secondary‑market activity, with pre‑IPO holdings of junior miners and tech startups changing hands at a 12 % premium to the last private round 【previous briefing】. The trend is driven by institutional investors seeking liquidity after the banks’ dividend payouts and the private‑equity profit dip, which together freed roughly C$300 million of capital in the first half of June. The secondary market has become a de‑facto pricing mechanism for upcoming IPOs, as seen in the pricing of Amex Exploration’s “LIFE” offering, which was set 0.4 % above the secondary‑trade average for comparable assets 【previous briefing】.

Outlook for the next two weeks The calendar ahead is packed with events that will shape Bay‑Street deal flow. On June 18, the Competition Bureau is expected to release draft guidance on merger thresholds for the financial services sector, a move that could accelerate consolidation among mid‑size insurers and fintechs. OSFI is slated to publish its 2026 “Liquidity Management for Non‑Bank Financial Institutions” paper on June 21, likely tightening capital‑raising standards for credit‑unions and BDC‑type lenders. On June 24, the Toronto Stock Exchange will host the “Clean‑Energy Capital Markets Forum,” where several renewable‑project developers have hinted at upcoming green‑bond issuances ranging from C$150 million to C$300 million. Finally, the settlement of SpaceX’s IPO on June 26 will provide concrete data on post‑offering price stability, a metric that Canadian sponsors will monitor closely when pricing their own listings.

In sum, the first half of June has reinforced a resilient yet increasingly selective capital‑raising environment on Bay Street. Strong bank earnings have lowered financing costs, but the contraction in private‑equity profits and the seismic pull of the SpaceX IPO are compressing the pool of available equity capital. Debt issuers are capitalizing on a still‑moderate yield curve, while secondary‑market activity offers a price‑discovery function for upcoming IPOs. Market participants should watch regulatory guidance on mergers, OSFI’s liquidity framework, and the post‑SpaceX pricing dynamics as the next wave of Canadian issuances takes shape.

☐ Background · published Sun, Jun 14, 3:17 AM

لومړنی کتنه

د جون د لومړۍ نیمایۍ کې د کاناډا د سرمایې بازار فعالیت ته شدت منحسوس شو، چیرې چې وړاندیز کونکو په مجموعه د اکویټي او پورونو د معاملاتو له لارې تقریباً 1.3 ملیارده کاناډایي ډالره (C$) راټول کړل. Amex Exploration شرکت د TSX Venture Exchange څخه د 43.5 ملیونه کاناډایي ډالرو د "LIFE" وړاندیز لپاره منظوري ترلاسه کړه چې له اړتیا څخه زیات غوښتنې درلودې، او په عین حال کې یې تر 31 ملیونه کاناډایي ډالرو پورې د खाजगी ځای پر ځای کولو (private placement) پلان پیل کړ (د 2026 کال د مای 17 نیټه). Bird Construction شرکت د 250 ملیونه کاناډایي ډالرو د senior-note खाजगी ځای پر ځای کولو اعلان کړ چې هدف یې د موجوده پورونو بیا تمویل او د ক্রেডিট تړون اصلاح کول دي (د 2026 کال د مای 28 نیټه). Fairfax Financial شرکت د 750 ملیونه امریکایي ډالرو د senior-note وړاندیز افشا کړ چې د 6٪ ثابت نرخ لري او د 2056 کال لپاره یې terminated ټاکل شوی (د 2026 کال د جون 7 نیټه). د PesoRama 16 ملیونه کاناډایي ډالرو ډیبنچر (debenture) د پورونو د تلافی کولو لپاره د تمویل یو بل څانګه جوړه کړه (د 2026 کال د مای 17 نیټه). په همدې اونۍ کې د ثانوي بازار فعالیت کې هم څرګنده زیاتوالی لیدل شو ځکه چې پانګونکارو د pre-IPO ملکیتونو لپاره د نقدینت (liquidity) غوښتنه کوله، یو trend چې د 2026 کال د جون 7 په یوه راپور کې د خصوصي ثانوي بازارونو د پراختیا په اړه ورته اشاره شوې وه. په مجموع کې، دا معاملې د ټورنټو او مونټریل په تبادلو کې د تمویل یو قوي جریان ښيي، ځکه چې کورنی شرکتونه د کاناډا د "Big Three" بانکونو د قوي ګټو له امله د اکویټي له مناسب چره ګټه پورته کوي (د 2026 کال د مای 30 نیټه).

معامله / چاپ

د Amex Exploration د اکویټي راټولول د "LIFE" (Limited-Interest Funding Equity) وړاندیز په بڼه تنظیم شوي وو، چې یو ډول ترکیبي وسیله ده او د ترجیحي حصو او تبدیلیدونکو پورونو ځانګړتیاوې پکې یوځای کړې دي. د 2026 کال د مای 17 د شرکت د فایلینګ له مخې، 43.5 ملیونه کاناډایي ډالرو څانګه چې 7.2٪ کلنی سود (yield) یې درلود، په دریو ورځو کې په بشپړ ډول پذیره شوه. په ورته وخت کې تر 31 ملیونه کاناډایي ډالرو پورې खाजगी ځای پر ځای کول، چې په Labrador Trough کې د ډرلینګ پراختیا لپاره ځانګړي شوي وو، 6.8٪ کوپن (coupon) درلود او د National Instrument 51-102 له لارې به تصدیق شویو پانګونکارو ته ورکړل شي. د اکویټي او پور دا ګډ پکیج د Amex د وړاندیز څخه وړاندې د هرې اضافې د 1.45 کاناډایي ډالرو د بازار قیمت څخه 0.9٪ زیاتوالی ښيي، چې شرکت د 2026 کال د دویم trimest (Q2) لپاره د هرې اضافې په ګټه (EPS) 12٪ احتمالي زیاتوالی ته تهیاروي.

د Bird Construction د senior-note وړاندیز 5.5٪ سود سره قیمت määلوn شو، چې د 2026 کال د لومړي trimest (Q1) کې د کاناډا د पायाڅرو اړوند senior debt د 5.7٪ اوسط څخه لږ ټیټ دی (Bloomberg، جون 2026). دا 10 کلنې نوټونه، چې په 2036 کې پای ته رسېږي، غیر تضمین شوي (unsecured) دي مګر د covenant-lite جوړښت لري چې شرکت ته اجازه ورکوي تر 150 ملیونه کاناډایي ډالرو پورې موجوده term loans بیا تمویل کړي پرته له دې چې د default سبب شي. دا ځای پر ځای کول د BMO Capital Markets او RBC Capital لخوا تضمین شوي وو، چې هر یو 15٪ تخصیص ترلاسه کړ، او 1.4 ځله زیات پذیره شول، چې د منځنۍ کچې شرکتي پورونو لپاره قوي غوښتنه ښيي.

د Fairfax Financial د 750 ملیونه امریکایي ډالرو senior-note وړاندیز، چې د 2026 کال د جون 7 په نیټه اعلان شوی و، 6٪ ثابت نرخ او 30 کلنی مدت (تر 2056 کال پورې) درلود. دا نوټونه غیر تضمین شوي او د Fairfax د نورو ټولو مکلفیتونو څخه لوړ (senior) دي، او د Rule 144A له لارې وړ وړ институشنل پیرودونکو ته ورکړل شوي. دا قیمت د هغه وخت د متحده ایالاتو د خزانه دارۍ د 10 کلني 4.2٪ سود څخه 30 basis points پورته دی، چې د BBB-plus کریډیټ rating ąرونکي شرکت لپاره یو مناسب risk premium ښيي (S&P، جون 2026). دا پیسې د شرکت د عمومي اهدافو لپاره ځانګړې شوې دي، په ځانګړې توګه په متحده ایالاتو کې د بیمه sektor کې احتمالي acquisitions لپاره، چې په Fairfax د 2026 کال د لومړي trimest د ګټو په کال کې ورته اشاره شوې وه (جون 5، 2026).

PesoRama د 16 ملیونه کاناډایي ډالرو ډیبنچر، چې د 2026 کال د مای 17 په نیټه ثبت شوی، 4.9٪ کوپن او درې کلنی مدت (تر 2029 کال پورې) لري. دا وسیله په TSX Venture کې لیست شوې ده او د میکسیکو کې د شرکت د JOi Dollar Plus ریټیل ځایونو د inventory توسط تضمین شوې ده. وړاندیز د کاناډا د پینشن فنډونو او د متحده ایالاتو د hedge funds د ترکیب له لارې په بشپړ ډول پذیره شو، چې د پذیرنې اوسط قیمت د هرې اضافې د 0.78 کاناډایي ډالرو د بازار قیمت څخه 1.2٪ ټیټ و. د سرمایې دا راټولول د 2025 کال د اواخر کې اخیستل شوی 8 ملیونه کاناډایي ډالرو bridge loan تلافی کولو لپاره دی، ترڅو د شرکت leverage ratio له 2.4× څخه 1.9× ته ښه کړي.

د 2026 کال د جون 7 په اړه د ثانوي بازار فعالیت د pre-IPO شرکتونو د حصه‌دارانو لپاره د نقدینت (liquidity) چمتو کولو کې یو پراخ بدلون ښيي. د Forge Global او EquityZen په څیر پلیټ فارمونو د معاملاتو په حجم کې د یوې میاشتې په اوږمې 27٪ زیاتوالی ثبت کړ، چې د معاملاتو اوسط اندازه د مای له 1.2 ملیونه امریکایي ډالرو څخه په جون کې 1.5 ملیونه امریکایي ډالرو ته پورته شوه. دا زیاتوالی په جزئۍ توګه د وړاندیز کونکو ترڅخه د فیس حساسیت ته attributed کیږي، لکه څنګه چې د SpaceX مذاکرې ښيي ترڅو د خپل احتمالي 75 ملیارده امریکایي ډالرو IPO لپاره د underwriting فیسونه تر 0.75٪ څخه ټیټ وساتي (جون 7، 2026). که څه هم SpaceX یو امریکایي entity دی، مګر د فیس کمولو ستراتیژي یې کاناډایي underwriters مجبوروي چې د کورنی وړاندیزونو لپاره د قیمتي ماډلونو بیا ارزونه وکړي.

ولې دا مهمه ده

د ټورنټو سټاک اکسچینج (TSX) او TSX Venture کې د تمویل فعالیتونو تمرکز د یو پخپळې پخته شوي کورني سرمایې بازار ته اشاره کوي چې Increasingly د منځنۍ کچې شرکتونو د تمویل اړتیاوې پوره کولی شي پرته له دې چې بهرنی لیسټینګ ته اړتیا ولري. د مثال په توګه، د Amex Exploration ترکیبي "LIFE" جوړښت د هغه resource-focused شرکتونو لپاره یو الګو وړاندې کوي چې غواړي د اکویټي dilution او پور په څیر ګټو ترمنځ توازن پیدا کړي، یو ماډل چې ممکن هغه وخت ډیر شي کله چې junior miners دeCommodity قیمتونو د بدلون سره مخ شي. د Bird Construction د senior-note ځای پر ځای کولو د غوښتنې زیاتوالی د पायाڅرو پورونو لپاره د پانګونکارانو قوي لیلاس ښيي، یو sector چې د 2026 کال د FIFA World Cup وړاندې د ټرانسپورټ پروژو ته د فیډرال حکومت د بیا تمرکز له امله ګټه اخیستې ده (جون 11، 2026).

د Fairfax لوی پیمانه senior-note وړاندیز د کاناډایي بیمه کونکو د بیلنس شیټونو په اړه د институشنل پانګونکارانو باور ښيي، حتی کله چې د متحده ایالاتو پراخ high-yield بازار سخت کیږي. 6٪ کوپن، چې د Treasury نرخونو څخه لږ پورته دی، وړاندیز کوي چې پانګونکاران د یو شرکت لپاره چې نړیواله عملیات لري، د default risk premium ټیټ قیمت کوي. دا ممکن نور کاناډایي بیمه کونکي وهڅوي چې د senior-note بازار ته د اوږدې مودت تمویل لپاره لاس ورسوي، چې ممکن د کورني پور سرمایې بازار ته ژوروالی ورکړي.

د ثانوي بازار د معاملاتو زیاتوالی د pre-IPO شرکتونو د لومړنیو پانګونکارو او کارمندانو لپاره د وتلو (exit) یو مهم میکانیزم وړاندې کوي، چې د "lock-up" هغه premium کموي چې تقلیدي ډول د IPO قیمتونه لوړوي. د عام لیسټینګ څخه وړاندې د نقدینت (liquidity) وړاندې کولو سره، ثانوي پلیټ فارمونه د حصه‌دارانو توقعات د بازار د حقیقتونو سره همغږوي، یو ډینامیک چې ممکن د SpaceX مذاکراتو کې لیدل شوی د فیس کمولو فشار کم کړي. لکه څنګه چې کاناډایي وړاندیز کونکي د فیس کمولو trend ګورو، underwriters لکه BMO Capital او RBC Capital ممکن اړ وو چې خپل د فیس جوړښتونه تنظیم کړي ترڅو رقابتي پاتې شي، چې ممکن د mid-cap وړاندیزونو لپاره اوسط underwriting spread له تاریخي 1.5٪ څخه 1.2٪ ته راښکته کړي.

څه شیان څارل کیږي

بله مهمه مرحله د Amex Exploration د 2026 کال د دویم trimest (Q2) د ګټو د خپرولو очаکېږي، چې د جولای په پیلاو کې به وي، او به ښکاره کړي چې ایا راټول شوی سرمایه د Projected 12٪ EPS زیاتوالي ته تبدیل شوه که نه. برسیره پردې، د Bird Construction د covenant compliance راپورونه، چې د 2026 کال په سپټمبر کې د وړاندې کیدو 예정 دي، به د سودګالو د احتمالي زیاتوالي په وړاندې د هغې د covenant-lite senior-note جوړښت دوام وګوري. په پای کې، د کاناډا د ثانوي بازار پلیټ فارمونو د حجم او قیمت trendونه به د 2026 کال د Q3 پای پورې نږدې څارل شي، ځکه چې دوی ممکن د دې اړه یو پراخ بدلون ښيي چې کاناډایي وړاندیز کونکي pre-IPO تمویل او د underwriting فیس مذاکراتو ته څنګه چلند کوي.

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