The financial sector was the only one that issued more than one trade in yen, on Friday. Abbey National announced its 71st yen note of the year: a ¥500 million ($4.12 million) 25-year trade that has a final coupon of 7%. BNP Paribas did five deals. They ranged from ¥100 million to ¥501.9 million and had terms ranging from four months to 24 years. Vorarlberger Landes- und Hypothekenbank did a ¥500 million 20-year trade via Nomura. The coupon is fixed for the first two years at 4.40%, then becomes a euro-yen capped power reverse dual currency (PRDC) note. It is callable annually after the first two years. And Pfandbriefstelle der Oesterreichischen Landes-Hypothekenbank did a ¥1 billion note that goes out to October 2016. Credit Lyonnais was the bookrunner, and the coupon is fixed at 3.5% for the first two years, when it then becomes a PRDC and callable annually. Nordic Investment Bank rejoined the yen market after a break of four months. The ¥1 billion trade goes out to November 2011 and is a reverse floating rate note. The biggest trade came from the automotive industry though. Toyota Motor Finance Netherlands announced a ¥10 billion trade that matures in October next year and pays 0.03%. Venantius announced a ¥1 billion deal. Nomura was the bookrunner, and the note is a Bermuda callable reverse dual currency trade. The first year has a coupon fixed at 4.90%, then it turns into the FX structure and has a coupon of 4.9% minus the 6m $Libor level. Kommunalbanken did a ¥500 million 20-year deal, and Venus International, the Mitsubishi Trust International-arranged conduit, did a ¥2.8 billion four-year trade.
October 26, 2001