Last week ended quietly, considering the busy days before Friday. Apart from an ¥11 billion ($90.71 million) trade from DaimlerChrysler Co-ordination Centre there were no deals over ¥3 billion. BNP Paribas was bookrunner for DaimlerChrysler's deal, which goes out to March next year. It has a fixed coupon of 0.45%. Two other German borrowers announced trades. Commerzbank did a ¥762.22 million one-year deal. It pays 4%. And Landwirtschaftliche Rentenbank used Daiwa SMBC Europe for a ¥1.3 billion 20-year trade. The note is callable at every coupon payment date, and has a step-up structure to its fixed payments. The coupon is 1.5% until November 2006, 1.8% until November 2011, 2.2% until November 2016 and 2.6% thereafter. Some UK issuers were to be seen in the market too. Barclays Bank did a ¥100 million 25-year trade, its 100th of the year in yen. Royal Bank of Scotland announced one of the smallest yen trades ever. The ¥1 million 20-year note has a final coupon of 4%. And Marks and Spencer did a ¥6 million trade with Tokyo-Mitsubishi as bookrunner. The one-year note has a zero-coupon structure. Continental Europe was the busiest sector however. UBS announced a ¥2 billion five-year note; Svensk Exportkredit did two trades, for ¥300 million and ¥500 million. They mature in 30 years' time. And Hypo Alpe-Adria Bank announced a ¥500 million 15-year trade. The bookrunner was UBS Warburg, and the coupon is fixed for the first year at 3% and then becomes CMS-linked. American Honda Finance and Goldman Sachs both went for ¥3 billion trades. The former's goes out to November 2003 and the latter's to November 2006.
November 02, 2001