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  • London's emergency alert that Guinness reserves had sunk to dangerous levels following the Bank of Ireland's recent party is now over. But it was a close call. Fears that the black stuff was in short supply emerged after the cream of AIB's syndicators were seen to have joined last Wednesday's festivities at Pacific Oriental. Ireland's finest and a dozen or so miscellaneous bankers continued partying till dawn at Fuego's.
  • Amount: £1bn Issue price: 100.00
  • Rating: BBB+ Amount: Eu750m
  • Arcelor's Eu2.003bn loan was signed this week with bankers puzzling over the curious final amount taken by the borrower following an impressive performance in the market that raised over Eu2.5bn in commitments. A leading theory among banks this week was that the borrower decided to match the amount to the year of the deal.
  • IOI Corp Bhd's Eu230m five year fundraising has been launched to the market by arranger Citigroup. Potential lenders have been offered a margin of 85.5bp and front end fees of 12bp for co-arrangers absorbing Eu25m or more, 9bp for lead managers taking Eu15m-Eu24m and 7bp for managers lending Eu10m.
  • Compiled by Richard Favis RBC Capital Markets
  • Dollar issuance fell away this week with just $2.2bn issued from 125 notes, down nearly $800m on the previous seven days. Government borrowers were active in the currency, though the majority of this issuance came from the Republic of Lebanon which came with four notes for $314m. The largest of these notes was a $109m trade that matures in March 2005.
  • Euros were used for 103 trades totalling over $4.39bn this week, and accounting for 46% of all issuance. This represented an increase of more than $1bn on issuance over the previous seven days. German and French names dominated the sector taking nearly a 60% share of the market between them. Borrowers from Luxembourg were also active, coming with 10 notes for more than $128m. Three of these trades were for European Credit (Luxembourg). The largest was a Eu50m note that goes out 10 years.
  • The US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) this week appointed William McDonough, the outgoing president and chief executive of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, to head its new accounting oversight board, the PCAOB. He takes up his new position on August 1. He steps down from the Fed in July. The choice of McDonough - a unanimous decision by the SEC's five commissioners - was heralded by the SEC chairman William Donaldson on Tuesday.
  • More than $9.5bn of MTNs were issued this week, little changed from last week's total. The number of issues fell however, from 478 to 407. Yen issuance was down week-on-week with less than $1.3bn traded from 132 notes, a fall of $500m on the previous seven days. HBOS Treasury Services issued the largest note in this currency, a ¥20bn trade led by Nomura.
  • South African mining company Anglovaal Mining on Monday completed the first EMEA marketed secondary offering of 2003 when it priced a $76m sale in gold producer Avgold. Morgan Stanley lead managed the placing which comprised 90m shares at R6.50, a 12% discount to Monday's closing price. Anglovaal Mining (Avmin) had been hoping to sell 100m but could not find enough demand.
  • The selldown of the $1.2bn repo financing loan for Morgan Stanley has closed. The deal is oversubscribed and the borrower is looking at a possible increase to $1.5bn. JP Morgan is arranging the deal.