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  • Rating: Aa3/A+
  • Rating: A
  • The immediate attention of central European governments may be membership of the EU this May. But in the longer term, the region has its sights firmly fixed on membership of the single currency, if later than governments had hoped, towards the end of the decade. Meanwhile, as Kathyrn Wells reports, the domestic bond markets are increasingly becoming internationalised.
  • Central Europe’s sovereigns have been readying themselves for EU accession — notably by trying to make their bonds as large and liquid as possible, to attract mainstream European government bond buyers. As Kathryn Wells reports, 2004 should be a bumper year for issuance.
  • Citigroup was nursing a loss of at least Eu37.5m this week after unlucky timing and — according to market observers — poor judgement marred its Eu1.76bn bought deal in Infineon Technologies stock for Siemens.
  • After outperforming last year, Jonathan Sibun asks is it time for the inflation note to emerge from its niche?
  • ING has shut down its London convertible bond team. The bank said the closure will result in a “handful of redundancies”, though it hopes to reassign some of the staff to other areas of the bank.
  • Informa, the information and media company, will pay a margin of Libor plus 150bp on its £205m five year facility. The deal refinances Informa’s £200m 2001 loan and supports its acquisition of agricultural, pharmaceutical and biotechnology publisher PJB Publishing.
  • Facilities backing the buy-out of Inmarsat by Apax Partners will be signed next week with funding occurring at the end of that week.
  • In 2003, being in the right place at the right time meant being exposed to credit. Investors were delighted to see the corporate market turn around after the woes of Enron and WorldCom and the weight of money being put to work in the sector made performance a self-fulfilling prophecy. But with spreads having tightened to near historic lows, how can investors achieve outperformance in 2003? Neil Day reports.
  • The European high yield market opened its 2004 account quietly this week with two small issues, but the bulging pipeline of deals suggests a stellar year ahead.
  • Rating: B3/B