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Banking Essentials - Part I

This pathway will walk us through the basics of banks, starting with some of the different types and their main functions, then starting to look at the regulation faced by the banks, both before and after the Global Financial Crisis.

Greenwashing

Greenwashing is the act of distributing false information about something being more environmentally friendly than it actually is.

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Tackling the Cost of Living Crisis

In this video, Max discusses the cost-of-living crisis currently enveloping the UK. He examines its impact on households as well as the overall economy.

CSR and Sustainability in Financial Services

In the first video of this two-part video series, Elisa introduces us to sustainability. She begins by looking at the difference between sustainability and corporate social responsibility, two terms that can be easily confused.

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Featured Pathways

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Banking Essentials - Part I

This pathway will walk us through the basics of banks, starting with some of the different types and their main functions, then starting to look at the regulation faced by the banks, both before and after the Global Financial Crisis.

Greenwashing

Greenwashing is the act of distributing false information about something being more environmentally friendly than it actually is.

More pathways

Book a demo

Ready to get started?

Our Platform

Expert led content

+1,000 expert presented, on-demand video modules

Learning analytics

Keep track of learning progress with our comprehensive data

Interactive learning

Engage with our video hotspots and knowledge check-ins

Testing & certification

Gain CPD / CPE credits and professional certification

Managed learning

Build, scale and manage your organisation’s learning

Integrations

Connect Finance Unlocked to your current platform

Featured Content

More featured content

Tackling the Cost of Living Crisis

In this video, Max discusses the cost-of-living crisis currently enveloping the UK. He examines its impact on households as well as the overall economy.

CSR and Sustainability in Financial Services

In the first video of this two-part video series, Elisa introduces us to sustainability. She begins by looking at the difference between sustainability and corporate social responsibility, two terms that can be easily confused.

More featured content

Book a demo

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Book a demo

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Equity Investor Relations and Debt Investor Relations

Equity Investor Relations and Debt Investor Relations

Ronan White

40 years: Capital markets and investor relations

In this video, Ronan explores the nature of equity IR and debt IR, as well as examines the specific goals and objectives of each. He further explains the differences between the two.

In this video, Ronan explores the nature of equity IR and debt IR, as well as examines the specific goals and objectives of each. He further explains the differences between the two.

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Equity Investor Relations and Debt Investor Relations

12 mins 27 secs

Key learning objectives:

  • Understand the goals and responsibilities of Equity IR

  • Understand the goals and responsibilities of Debt IR

Overview:

Investors engage with companies either by investing in a company’s stock or lending money to an entity. IR has evolved into 2 separate headings - Equity IR and Debt IR. Each has a different investment focus, managed by different portfolio managers.

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Summary

What are the main roles and responsibilities of Equity IR?

The role of Equity IR is to lead and coordinate the whole communication process around corporate investments, providing the market with expected outcomes. They ensure that accurate and timely information is provided to the current stakeholders, inform brokers, analysts about results, and the corporate story, or event such as a business acquisition. Key feature of the IR team’s work is assessing and challenging analyst’s models and predictions. Ahead of a new share issue, equity IR aims to achieve a reasonable level of liquidity in the company’s equity, a stable share price and a balanced investor listing. Ultimate goal is to increase demand for the company’s stock and achieve a market valuation that reflects the fundamental value of the company. 

What are the additional responsibilities and engagement of equity IR?

Other tasks include gathering investor feedback, peer analysis and meeting regulatory requirements. This is achieved by coordinating people , events and engagement with the C-Suite members. Equity IR also ensures Capital Market Days, conference presentations and roadshow events all run smoothly. A competent and credible IR team enhances their ability to establish and maintain good relationships with the financial community.

History of debt IR and need for it

Debt IR has been slower to evolve as companies were initially less interested in the holders of their debt or had insufficient debt issued. Debt IR developed out of increased capital markets funding activity by banks, large corporates and increased  engagement with fixed-income investors. The need for and interaction with debt investors became evident.Debt investors focus on the bond issuer’s ability to service debt in a timely fashion. Debt investments are made by teams with interests in matters such as:

  • Public transactions in benchmark size
  • Private placements
  • Secured and/or unsecured transactions
  • Shorter term liquidity management
  • Duration investment
  • Structured credit including securitisations
  • Capital instruments such as AT1 (additional tier 1) or T2 (tier 2) 

There are no set rules around the establishment of a formal debt IR initiative.

What are the main goals and responsibilities of debt IR function?

Specific goals for debt IR include opening new debt investor markets, growing relationships with institutional investors, ensuring sustained market access for repeat debt issuance. Other objectives for debt IR include maintaining relationships with ratings agencies, investor feedback and sentiment to the board and measuring the company’s debt programmes against those of its peers. 

Engagement of debt IR

Generally there is less C-suite engagement in Debt IR and events such as capital markets days may be run along with the equity IR team. Debt IR’s positioning and reporting lines determine the people involved and the nature of their involvement. Typically, the executive team engagement in debt IR includes Senior Management, Treasurer, CFO, IR Officers and Funding Programme Management specialists such as the Head of Structured Finance.

 

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Ronan White

Ronan White

Ronan has over 30 years’ experience in senior management roles across the financial services sector in Ireland and the UK. His career spans treasury, capital markets, investor relations, corporate lending, corporate communications, marketing, and compliance. He currently works in Dublin with InCol Limited a mortgage sector, financial solutions business focusing on the UK, Irish and Benelux markets, and with its sister company, DFinitive Capital, a financial aggregator originating capital markets funding for the social and affordable housing sector in Ireland. Ronan serves as Non-executive Chairman of Moneycorp Technologies Limited (MTL), the Irish based regulated subsidiary of Moneycorp Group. MTL operates the group’s EU business. Prior to InCol and DFinitive Ronan worked with National Australia Bank in London and prior to that he was with Anglo Irish Bank (Dublin and London), the Woodchester Group (a consumer finance business owned by GE Capital and before that by Credit Lyonnais) (Dublin and London) and with Allied Irish Banks (Dublin). Ronan is a Fellow of Chartered Accountants Ireland having trained with KPMG where he specialised in reconstruction and insolvency assignments. He is a graduate of University College Dublin with a B. Comm. He holds the FT Non-Executive Director Diploma.

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