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  • Fannie Mae is to offer Discount Notes in currencies outside the dollar, its CEO Franklin Raines and treasurer Linda Knight revealed in London on Tuesday. FX Discount Notes, as they will be called, will be available from April 7 through a six member dealer group consisting of Citigroup/SSSB, Credit Suisse First Boston, Deutsche Bank, Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan and Lehman Brothers.
  • The Federal Home Loan Banks this week priced a $3bn five year bond, the third in a series of syndicated and strategic deals launched to offset mortgage liabilities. This week's deal was the first five year in that series and offered investors diversification in a week that saw Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac's credits once again in the spotlight.
  • Mandated arrangers ABN Amro, Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi, Citigroup/SSSB, JP Morgan and Nordea launched syndication of the Eu800m five year revolver for Outokumpu at a bank presentation in Helsinki yesterday (Thursday). The deal pays a margin of 55bp-66bp over Libor. A utilisation fee of 5bp will be charged if 33%-66% of the facility is drawn, rising to 10bp if 66% or over is used. The deal also carries a commitment fee of 40% of the margin.
  • CSFB and SG launched general syndication of the Eu769m debt backing the buy-out of Sigma Kalon yesterday (Thursday). Lenders have been asked to join as lead arrangers taking Eu25m for 75bp, or Eu15m for 62.5bp.
  • Banks were signed into Gallaher's £650m five year loan on Tuesday. They are ABN Amro, Barclays, BayernLB, BNP Paribas, Caja Madrid, Dresdner Kleinwort Wasserstein, Goldman Sachs, HSBC, ING, JP Morgan, Lloyds, Royal Bank of Scotland, WestLB are called mandated lead arrangers.
  • EuroWeek hears Energie Baden Württemberg (ENBW) has mandated Citigroup/SSSB, SG and Royal Bank of Scotland to arrange its new Eu3bn loan. The deal refinances a Eu3bn revolver signed in 2002. None of the arrangers of the 2002 loan - Barclays, JP Morgan and WestLB - feature in the 2003 deal
  • The Hellenic Republic will broaden the euro inflation-linked market next week when it launches a Eu700m minimum 2025 bond via JP Morgan, National Bank of Greece and UBS Warburg. Since October, when Agence France Trésor (AFT) launched the first government bond linked to euro inflation, several EU sovereigns have examined the possibility of entering the market. Last month Réseau Ferré de France became the first non-government issuer to sell the product via an Eu800m 20 year issue.
  • Guarantor: Hanson plc Rating: Baa1
  • Bank of China, HSBC and Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp have launched a HK$2.4bn five year term loan for Cheung Kong Finance, guaranteed by parent Cheung Kong Holdings. Participants receive a margin of 35bp over Hibor. Senior managers pledging HK$150m or more gain 40bp, lead managers absorbing HK$100m-HK$140m 32.5bp and managers taking HK$50m-HK$90m, 27.5bp.
  • Amount: Sfr2.5bn equivalent Rating: Moody's/Fitch
  • Rating: Aa3/A+ Amount: Eu1bn lower tier two capital
  • HSBC has underlined its ambition to expand in the Australian, New Zealand and Japanese loan markets with a set of new appointments. The bank has hired Graham McNamara from National Australia Bank (NAB) to head up its Australasian syndication efforts.