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  • KPNQwest, the Dutch alternative telecoms carrier, has announced that it will acquire the Ebone and central Europe businesses of Global TeleSystems (GTS), the bankrupt pan-European broadband and IP services company. The acquisition will cost KPNQwest Eu645m in the form of Eu435m of assumed net debt and by the issue of Eu210m of new convertible bonds to GTS bondholders. The deal has been heralded by those in the market as an important deal both for KPNQwest and also for the alternative telecoms sector as a whole.
  • Rexam, the UK container manufacturer, has signed a £
  • The Republic of Turkey stepped back into the international capital markets this week with a Eu500m short dated bond that could re-open the euro denominated sector for emerging market sovereigns. And bankers agreed that in difficult market conditions, Turkey’s ability to raise Eu500m was an achievement — even if it did have to pay up to attain the size.
  • The Republic of Turkey stepped back into the international capital markets this week with a Eu500m short dated bond that could re-open the euro denominated sector for emerging market sovereigns. And bankers agreed that in difficult market conditions, Turkey’s ability to raise Eu500m was an achievement — even if it did have to pay up to attain the size.
  • Bulgaria Banks have been signed into the Eu10m EIB guarantee facility for First Investment Bank.
  • You have to feel slightly sorry for the good folk at Merrill Lynch, the firm that seems to find itself in the press almost every day, but for all of the wrong reasons. At the beginning of the year, the firm was in its customary position as the cornerstone of the US financial services industry. It had seen off blue-collar upstarts such as Charles Schwab, which had the impudence to try and tweak Merrill's tail. To its many admirers around the world, Merrill looked more solid than the Rock of Gibraltar. But 2001 has been an annus horibilis for Merrill. Rather than resembling the Rock of Gibraltar, the firm began to wobble like a blancmange at a summer staff picnic. Merrill discovered too late that it had too many eggs in the equities basket. When demand for equities disappeared, firms like Lehman caught a cold, but houses such as Merrill, Goldman and Morgan Stanley, whose investment banking businesses thrive in rising stockmarkets, contracted pneumonia.
  • Brazil * Banco Bradesco SA
  • * Achmea Hypotheekbank NV Rating: AA-
  • * Agence France Trésor Rating: Aaa/AAA
  • The number of euro trades was down as last week drew to a close but volumes were large. Landesbank Baden-Wurttemberg closed an 18-month euro500 million ($448.71 million) note via Merrill Lynch. The plain vanilla note pays interest of 3m Euribor flat. Landesbank Hessen-Thuringen also did a euro500 million trade. The plain vanilla note carries a final coupon of 5.500% and was joint-led by ABN Amro and SG Investments. And Goldman Sachs closed a euro250 million MTN that pays interest singularly. Gas Natural was a busy issuer doing trades for euro40 million and euro100 million. Both notes pay interest quarterly and mature next October. Societe Generale also closed two trades for euro1.67 million and euro3.45 million. Both notes go out to October 19 2011. Bank Austria issued the longest-dated trade - a euro12 million plain vanilla trade that has a tenor of 30-years. The note pays a coupon of 5.935% and was led by HypoVereinsbank.
  • The number of euro trades shot up to 17 yesterday with many smaller volumes being done. Gallaher Group made the fourth trade off its £
  • Yesterday saw the busiest trading in the MTN market for quite some time. And euro was no exception as 29 trades were closed for $2.71 billion equivalent. Telefonica Europe dominated volume with two euro1 billion ($892.25 million) trades that were part of the same tranche. One was for three years and pays interest on an annual basis. The other was a five-year note that pays a coupon of 5.125% annually. There were five bookrunners for the trade: Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria, BNP Paribas, Invercaixa Valores SVB, JPMorgan and Salomon Smith Barney. Westfalische Hypothekenbank (WestHyp) was the busiest issuer in terms of the number of trades made, closing four notes for euro315 million in total. It did a euro250 million note that matures on May 5 2004. The note has a coupon of 3m Libor flat. ABN Amro was the bookrunner. Deutsche Bank led a four-year euro25 million note for the issuer that has a fixed coupon of 4.125%. And Deutsche Bank also lead-managed WestHyp's other two trades - for euro8 million and euro32 million. The notes are straight floaters and have coupons of 3m Libor flat. They both mature on May 9 2006. ABN Amro was also busy placing a note for Hypothekenbank in Essen. The note was for euro25 million and has a tenor of one-year. The plain vanilla note carries a coupon 3.360%. And Hypo Alpe-Adria Bank did a euro10 million note that goes out to December 26 2013. The note is linked to underlying securities. Westdeutsche Landesbank was the bookrunner.