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  • The European Union is on the verge of destroying the ideal of a pan-European debt market if a draft directive on issuance prospectuses is approved, a coalition of industry groups will say today (Friday). They will urge the economics and finance ministers of the European Union to make some radical amendments to the prospectus directive before it is sent back to the European parliament for approval.
  • Mark B Johnson interviewed several leading international fund managers to gauge their views on the state of the Japanese equity markets.
  • The US bond markets ended October on an upbeat note, with Dex Media East issuing the biggest junk bond deal since January and a flurry of high grade issuers making the most of continued stability in corporate spreads. The junk bond market provided the highlight of the week, with the successful offering of $975m of five and 10 year bonds by Dex Media East LLC.
  • BNP Paribas, Royal Bank of Scotland and WestLB will launch the Eu250m three year term loan for EBS into syndication next week. The loan will carry a margin of 21bp over Libor and will have similar tickets and fees to those seen on the recently syndicated loan for Irish Nationwide Building Society - 17.5bp for a take of £20m, 15bp for £15m and 10bp for £10m.
  • Extreme volatility in the corporate markets has meant that triple-A and sovereign backed paper are well and truly back in vogue. Driving much of the demand has been an exceptionally strong Asian bid which has shown a particular liking for dollar denominated benchmarks. Neil Day reports.
  • Banca Agrileasing has mandated DZ Bank (bookrunner), ING Bank (documentation and facility agent), KBC Bank (bookrunner), La Compagnia Finanziaria (bookrunner) and Lloyds (bookrunner) to arrange a Eu200m five year amortising term loan. DZ, ING, KBC and Lloyds TSB have fully underwritten the facility.
  • In 1999 Japan Bank for International Cooperation was born out of the amalgamation of the Export-Import Bank of Japan and the Overseas Economic Cooperation Fund. Its role is directly linked to Japan's expansion in the global economy. Kenichiro Shiozawa, director, capital markets division, explains why so far this year it has not yet made an appearance in the international markets.
  • Since 1956, the Japan Highway Public Corporation has been responsible for the development and management of Japan's state-of-the-art expressway infrastructure. Hiroyuki Suzuki, manager of the funding division, explains that the corporation is still looking for a window in which to tap the international markets this year.
  • Jordan Telecom took advantage of excess liquidity in the Jordanian market to complete its Jd62m (Eu90m) IPO this week. The Jordanian government sold 26m shares at Jd2.35 apiece. The stake is equivalent to just over 10% of the company and makes Jordan Telecom the second largest company listed on the Jordan stock exchange by market capitalisation.
  • Kreditanstalt für Wiederaufbau (KfW) has rounded off a stellar year of benchmark funding with a Eu5bn three year trade that was closed a day early and almost Eu1.75bn oversubscribed.
  • Sole mandated arranger Standard Bank signed banks into the $15m six month trade finance facility for Nurbank on Monday in Almaty. The deal is priced at a margin of 325bp over Libor. Parex Bank joined as a co-arranger for a ticket of $3m. International Moscow Bank joined as a lead manager for a take of $2m.