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  • BRE Bank got away a scaled back three year Eu125m FRN this week via Commerzbank and Morgan Stanley, achieving tight pricing of 99.786 for the paper paying a coupon of Euribor plus 37.5bp. The bond had been projected at Eu150m-Eu200m at the time of a two-day roadshow in London and Frankfurt at the beginning of last week. In the end, 14 accounts participated in the bond, all but one of them banks.
  • Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) successfully tapped into short dated demand this week with the launch of a $350m November 2005 bond issue, despite long dated Philippines paper suffering from persistant market volatility. The four year Reg S transaction, BSP's second international bond issue of the year, gained praise for its performance in taxing market conditions. However, some bankers highlighted the relatively high new issue premium paid by the borrower.
  • British Telecomunications on Tuesday took another step in the strategy it devised as part of its restructuring when shareholders approved the demerger of mm02, its mobile subsidiary. BT, which is being advised by Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley and Schroder Salomon Smith Barney, announced the demerger in May, in exchange for investor approval of its £5.9bn rights issue.
  • Swiss banks, corporates and the government have joined forces in the recapitalisation of Crossair, despite the EU warning that the deal represented a serious distortion of competition. The plan, known as Phoenix Plus, came after weeks of negotiations, as UBS and Credit Suisse and the government tried to raise funds from Swiss businesses and cantons.
  • * Bank of America Corp Rating: Aa2/A+/AA-
  • Two deals launched this week underline the fact that the European LBO loan market is very much open for business, despite what have been described as the toughest market conditions seen for 10 years. "This is part of the normal cycle," said one leveraged financier. "If you look at the debt multiples, we are not going to hit the volumes of the early 1990s."
  • Angola Mandated lead arrangers BNP Paribas (joint bookrunner), Glencore, Natexis Banque Populaires (joint bookrunner) and SG (joint bookrunner) have launched the general syndication of the $500m four year oil receivables backed term loan for Sonangol, the state owned oil producer.
  • Allianz upped the limit off its euro1 billion ($893.18 million) multi-currency Euro-CP programme to euro5 billion. It has also dropped Bayerische Hypotheken- und Wechsel-Bank from the dealer panel and Schweizerischer Bankverein (Deutschland) is renamed as UBS Warburg.
  • The French government this week launched its maiden OATei to a rapturous reception. Launched by the Agence France Trésor (AFT), it was the first government bond to be linked to euro zone inflation. The transaction, which marked a change from previous OATi offerings pegged to the domestic inflation rate, was seen as an attempt by France to broaden its international investor base, although it also clearly expanded the worldwide market for inflation linked product.