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  • Angola The $600m oil-receivables backed facility for Sonangol - the state owned oil producer - has been launched to sub-underwriters.
  • Hong Kong The HK$3.8bn 4-1/2 year fundraising for Salisburgh Co, mandated to ABN Amro, BNP Paribas, BOCI Capital, Citibank/Salomon Smith Barney, HSBC, SG and Standard Chartered Bank, has been closed. The facility was oversubscribed but not increased.
  • Asia Pacific * REISMAC 2001-2
  • Australia Australia Magnesium Corp's A$932m multi-tranche project financing arranged by ABN Amro, ANZ Investment Bank, JP Morgan and WestLB will be relaunched next week.
  • Japanese issuers were once again most popular in the yen sector yesterday, but in terms of volume it was the Swedes who took top spot. Spintab was responsible, announcing a ¥20 billion ($164.7 million) deal with Salomon Smith Barney as bookrunner. It matures in October next year and has no structure, paying a straight coupon of 0.1%. Svensk Exportkredit did three trades. One was a ¥1 billion note that goes out to November 2026, the others were a ¥180 million deal and a ¥300 million deal. Both have terms of 30 years and pay a final coupon of 6%. Rabobank Nederland announced its 79th yen trade of 2001. It was a ¥1 billion note, with Merrill Lynch as dealer and has a 15-year tenor. Its coupon is fixed at 2% for the first year and then turns into a step-up inverse floating rate note (FRN). It is callable every 6 months. It was the only Dutch borrower doing yen business yesterday, but France had its usual spate of trades. CDC IXIS Capital Markets announced a ¥600 million trade and a ¥1 billion 20-year trade. The first was led by Merrill Lynch and has a fixed coupon for one year then becomes a PRDC. It is callable every year. The second has a fixed coupon of 2% for the first year then becomes a reverse FRN. It is callable at every coupon payment date, which is semi-annual. Credit Agricole Indosuez did a ¥100.55 million trade and a ¥500 million trade. They have respective maturities of 6 months and 15 years. And Caisse Nationale Des Caisses d'Epargne et de Prevoyance announced a ¥1 billion 150year deal with a coupon of 2.5%. Nomura was bookrunner for a Hypo Alpe-Adria Bank issue. The ¥500 million note goes out to November 2021 and has an initial coupon of 2%. After a year this turns into a PRDC, callable semi-annually. And Nomura also led a trade for KfW International Finance. The ¥1 billion deal was quickly increased to ¥1.1 billion, and has a tenor of 25 years. The coupon of 5.2% lasts a year, and then becomes An Australian dollar - yen PRDC. It is callable after one year and semi-annually thereafter.
  • Salomon Smith Barney was very busy in yen yesterday, doing trades for at least five different issuers in the currency. Kommunekredit announced two notes via Salomon. One was a ¥500 million ($4.12 million) 20-year note that has a fixed coupon of 4% for the first year, then turns into a Bermuda callable power reverse dual currency (PRDC) structure. Its other trade was a ¥600 million note with an identical structure, except for a fixed coupon of 3% for the first year. Salomon also led a deal for European Investment Bank, which was a ¥1 billion note. It goes out to October 2026. And World Bank announced two trades with Salomon as dealer: a ¥1 billion 30-year trade and a ¥5 billion 30-year trade. Japanese issuers were most popular though, as they have been for the last month or so. Mitsubishi Motors Credit of America did a ¥1.5 billion note via Salomon. It matures in January next year. Nippon Oil Finance (Netherlands) did a ¥1 billion 5-year deal. It pays a final coupon of 0.8%. And SMBC Capital Markets announced a ¥3 billion one-year trade. Salomon was the bookrunner again. Goldman Sachs led a deal for DePfa-Bank Europe. The ¥1.145 billion note matures in February next year, and has a bund-exchangeable structure, allowing the issuer to make its redemption payment in bunds rather than cash if it wants. If not, the final coupon is 4%. Svensk Exportkredit did a ¥300 million deal that goes out to March 2031, and has a fixed coupon of 6% for the first year-and-a-half and then turns into a PRDC. It is callable after a year-and-a-half. And Vorarlberger Landes- und Hypothekenbank announced a ¥1.1 billion 15-year deal and a ¥500 million 20-year deal. The first was done by Shinkin International and is a CMS-linked trade, callable after one year. The second was done by Salomon and has a fixed coupon of 4.55% for the first two years, then becomes a PRDC. It is callable after two years and has semi-annual coupon payments.
  • Most of the issuers placing paper in yen yesterday have done so many times before in 2001. Credit Lyonnais Finance (Guernsey) announced a ¥116.89 million ($960,000) trade and a ¥50.05 million trade. The first has a tenor of one month, the second a tenor of just over two months. Deutsche Bank did a ¥1.134 billion trade that goes out to February next year, and Daiwa Securities SMBC announced four trades, all of which were ¥500 million notes and all of which have tenors of 20 years. LVMH made its third yen trade in as many weeks. It was a ¥1 billion 5-year trade, with Tokyo-Mitsubishi International as bookrunner. It has a fixed coupon of 0.95% throughout its tenor. Eksportfinans did a ¥500 million deal that matures in November 2021. The structure is a non-call two Bermuda callable note, with a fixed coupon of 3.5% for the first two years and then turns into a Australian dollar - yen power reverse dual currency note. Payment is in yen. Irish Life & Permanent announced its seventh and eighth yen notes of the year with a ¥2.077 billion trade and a ¥2.093 million deal. The first note has a three-month maturity and the second as a term of four months.
  • Banco Bradesco provided the Latin new issue market with a ray of hope this week when it was able to raise $200m worth of one year paper in the Eurobond market. The deal, led by Merrill Lynch, was launched as a $150m 5.75% deal at the beginning of the week and increased yesterday (Thursday) to $200m. Although Bradesco's inability to go longer than one year speaks of the anxiety among investors about Latin risk these days, the deal is nonetheless a sign that European and Latin retail buyers are willing to put their cash to work in certain credits.
  • Caixa Geral de Depositos has raised the limit off its Euro-MTN programme to euro10 billion ($9.01 billion) from euro5 billion. Nomura has been added to the dealer panel.
  • Although it has recently had to shed some of its badly performing subsidiaries, British Telecommunications (BT) is suddenly able to pat itself on the back. The UK telecom group has been named as the top telecom in the Dow Jones global and European sustainability indexes, usurping Deutsche Telekom (DT) and giving investors at least one reason to keep their faith. The last 18 months have been precarious for the telecom industry. Huge increases in debt were followed by credit downgrades, which in turn were followed by falling share prices and announcements of big job-cuts. But whereas DT has maintained a regular presence in the Euro-MTN market - it has issued 38 trades this year totalling over $5.5 billion - BT's treasury, in an effort to keep the rating agencies happy, has been trying to reduce its debt from a peak of $30 billion to less than $10 billion. This has meant doing very little in the Euro-MTN and Euro-CP markets. BT's last MTN issue was in October last year, and although it made a spate of CP trades in April and May this year, there has been nothing since. A source close to the BT treasury says they have no need to issue at the moment, though they will be watching the markets and do plan to use their facilities again. But the news from Dow Jones means investors can feel more confident in their appraisal of the UK telco. Adrian Hosford, director of BT social policy, thinks the ramifications for BT's financial image could be great. He says: "This is a major achievement. Sustainability is becoming a hot issue for investors, and although some traditional investors look purely at the short-term profits, the more serious-minded investors will be taking the whole performance into account. I think that, ultimately, these indexes could even influence the credit ratings of a company." The Dow Jones Sustainability Indexes (DJSIs) rate companies on economic, social and environmental criteria, giving roughly equal weight to each dimension. The value of these indexes to investors comes from the fact that companies with high sustainability rankings are assumed to have disciplined management teams. BT is the top telecom in the DJSI World, which was launched in September 1999. It is now also top of its sector in the DJSI STOXX, the European version, which was published last Monday, October 15. Hosford said in a BT press release: "Achieving this ranking is particularly important because investors have driven it. A growing number now share BT's conviction that integrating economic, environmental and social success factors into business strategy can result in competitive advantages." Although DJSI World has been published for two years it is the first time BT has gone to the top spot. Previously DT was top, and it gave the UK group a close run this year in both the DJSI World and the DJSI STOXX. Edoardo Gai, assistant sustainability analyst at SAM Group, which is the operating company of the DJSI, says: "Everyone thinks this is about Deutsche Telekom and BT. The last two years DT was leading, now it is BT. Next year we expect the competition to be very close indeed." Hans Ehnert, head of corporate communications at DT, is not as enthusiastic as Hosford, at BT, about the relevance of the DJSI however. He says: "It is one criterion for evaluating the investability of a company. It could attract investors who are interested in our values, but different investors have different priorities. And I doubt that any index could influence a rating agency." Merrill Lynch is the arranger and sole dealer off BT's $20 billion Euro-MTN programme, and is also a dealer off DT's euro15 billion ($13.59 billion) debt issuance programme. Dean Fogg, a trader on the MTN desk, also takes the view that only well-established indexes can affect investors' opinions. He says: "If the index is a tracker fund, or acts as an established benchmark for the market, then investors might take note of how a company is doing. But otherwise it's highly unlikely that it will have much effect." BT's lack of activity in the MTN market compares starkly with DT's commitment to frequent issues. The German firm has been especially busy in the last two quarters, issuing 99% of its trades this year in that period. Norbert Zimmerman, head of debt trading at DT, says: "We want to stay with the market and keep our level of outstandings between euro7 billion and euro12 billion." But he does not think that BT's absence from the market has any effect on DT's ability to place paper. He adds: "We have a separate credit to BT, and it is a well-known credit, so our issuance does not depend on BT's activity." BT's Baa1 senior unsecured rating from Moody's is two notches below DT's A2 rating, and the UK company thinks that its performance in the DJSI could help compensate for its weaker credit. But Carlos Winzer, senior president, European market at Moody's, and the analyst for BT, thinks the nature of the sustainability indexes, incorporating not just economic but social and environmental factors, could be more than the average investor wants. He says: "Moody's sells its own index to investors which I am sure they use for investigating investability. But ours, among other things, measures probability of default, and that is what the investor is worried about." Gai, at SAM Group, disagrees, saying: "I believe this method will grow, and could be used to evaluate potential investments in the future."
  • * Canada Housing Trust No1 Guarantor: Government of Canada through CMHC
  • Centrica, the leading supplier of energy services in the UK, launched its first transaction since its demerger from British Gas in 1997. The £400m deal was seen as the first true test of the sterling market since September 11. The A2/A rated 11 year deal followed earlier utility offerings from Innogy, EdF, RWE and PowerGen, and is the first to be launched off the borrower's newly signed $2bn Euro MTN programme.