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  • Globals * Freddie Mac
  • Freddie Mac and Federal Home Loan Banks were responsible for two huge trades this week. Freddie Mac closed its eighth $5 billion note this year. The non-syndicated trade goes out to 2004 and pays a final coupon of 4.5%. Freddie Mac has also issued three $6 billion trades this year. And Federal Home Loan Banks issued a $1.75 billion note that matures in 18 months. European Investment Bank closed the longest-dated trade of Friday. The $87 million note goes out to 2021. KfW and IFC were in the six-year sector. UBS Warburg led IFC's syndicated $250 million six-year note. There were six co-leads. The note pays a final coupon of 5.375% and has a redemption price of 100%. KfW's $25 million note pays a final coupon of 6.125%.
  • US dollar took 32% of the market yesterday, with 21 trades. The maturities were mainly in the mid-term sector, ranging between one year and five years. But Sigma Finance Corp issued six $1.67 million 10-year trades, all due on August 15. Twenty-eight of the issuer's 35 trades have been in US dollar and 12 of these mature in 2011. And HSBC Bank USA was the only borrower in the one-month sector, with $100,000, $300,000 and $350,000 notes, all due on August 24. Among the mid-term borrowers was Dorada corp with a $21.15 million one-year note that pays interest quarterly and a generous coupon of 15.410%. It is the borrower's 15th note this year. Seven of its 15 trades had Merrill Lynch as bookrunner. Northern Rock's $50 million note also has a quarterly interest payment frequency and it goes out to 2003. GMAC made an appearance in the market with a $98 million three-year note that pays 5.145% interest. The borrower has issued in seven currencies this year, but has stuck to US dollar for its three- to five-year funding. Den norske Bank closed a $300 million three-year FRN. And Westpac Banking Corp's $20 million note goes out to 2006. Joining it in the five-year maturity bracket were Nippon Oil Finance (Netherlands) and Royal Bank of Scotland.
  • The 23 trades announced in US dollar yesterday made up almost half the market and the longest maturity went out as far as 10 years. HSBC Bank and HSBC Investment Bank closed five trades between them in the currency. The smallest was a $200,000 five-year note that pays a final coupon of 5% and pays interest semi-annually; and the biggest was a $20 million 50-day trade. Other borrowers at the short end are Unibanco - Uniao de Bancos Brasileiros and Rheinhyp Rheinische Hypothekenbank. Unibanco, rated B2 by Moody's, was the lowest credit to issue in US dollar yesterday. It closed a $1 million two-month trade. And Aa3-rated Rheinhyp closed a $80 million one-year note that pays a final coupon of 3.65%. The longer-maturity sector was the domain of the triple-A credits. Rabobank Nederland closed a $20 million five-year note that pays interest quarterly. And triple-A rated CDC IXIS Capital Markets also closed a non-syndicated $20 million note lead managed by Salomon Smith Barney. Two of the 23 notes were FRNs and these were issued by Aa3 names Eni Coordination Center and Bank of Nova Scotia. Eni, the Italian energy utility, closed a $30 million two-year trade, lead managed by Barclays Capital. And Bank of Nova Scotia closed a $500 million syndicated deal, led by Barclays Capital, Deutsche Bank and UBS Warburg. The note was issued at 99.963% and Tokyo-Mitsubishi and ScotiaMcLeod were also involved on the deal as co-lead manager and co-manager respectively.
  • Following the mid-august holiday in most of Europe yesterday, trading was very quiet. Just 55 new trades were announced on MTNWare, compared to the usual volume of between 80 and 110. And of the 55 trades, 22 were denominated in US dollar, making up 35% of the market. All the US dollar maturities were six months or longer. Sumitomo Bank International Finance was at the short end with a $3 million six-months note and Westland/Utrecht Hypotheekbank closed a one-year $13 million trade that pays interest quarterly. Also in the one-year sector was Volkswagen Financial Services. JPMorgan led the $45 million trade. Union Bank of Norway issued a $30 million three-year note that pays a final coupon of 4.975%. The six-year sector was dominated by HSBC Bank USA. It issued seven six-year notes, all due on August 17, with amounts between $300,000 and $4.76 million. At the long end Landwirtschaftliche Rentenbank issued two trades for $18.21 million and $18.41 million. Both mature in 2011. And SPV conduit ELAN issued a $2.5 million 12-year note. ELAN is an issuer off Morgan Stanley's multiple issuer programme.
  • * Bank of Nova Scotia Rating: Aa3/A+/AA-
  • Verizon, the US phone company, visited the dollar market this week with a $1bn 6.50% global due in 2011 for its Verizon New England subsidiary. The lead managers were Bear Stearns and Deutsche Bank. A spokesman for the firm declined to speak in detail about the transaction, saying only that the financing was undertaken to replace short term liabilities, but US swap dealers concluded that the notes must have been swapped to floating. This is because the opportunities to make money from the short end of the yield curve by swapping to floating are too good to ignore.
  • A motoring magazine once described the Volvo V70 as "a comfortable brick." It was a compliment. Volvo's Euro-MTN programme may not have the popular appeal of the estate car, but the team at the heart of the facility is just as robust, and they are creating far more money for the company. Volvo has raised $1.24 billion off 29 trades in the period January 1 to August 15 2001, up from $802.69 million off eight trades in the same period last year. It used two currencies in the whole of 2000, yen and euro, but this year has already expanded into the Czech koruna, Swedish krona and US dollar markets too. And unlike some of its competitors who, in the lean times of credit downgrades rigidly refuse to pay over a certain amount, Volvo has been praised by its dealers for being flexible and accommodating. Spreads in the automotive industry have ballooned since the credit migration (see MTNWeek, issue 213), and Volvo's have been no exception. But Volvo's capital markets team has maintained a good balance between taking a firm grip on its pricing and complying with investor demands. Thomas Lestin, senior dealer at Volvo Treasury, says: "The MTN programme is a very good funding tool as it is a mix of a lot of different instruments, and we have been using it opportunistically to find the right levels. I think Volvo has had a much nicer journey through the recent rough patches than some other issuers in the sector." JPMorgan is a dealer on Volvo's $4 billion Euro-MTN programme, which was signed in November 1994, and has placed eight trades for the issuer this year. This is more than double any other house. Robert Nankivell, managing director at the bank, says: "We think Volvo's pricing is pretty fair. Some issuers prefer a bond that meets their own criteria rather than satisfying the investor's requirements. But Volvo, and most issuers in Europe, being swap literate, realize that just because a bond has an irregular coupon it doesn't mean it was a bad deal." US issuers in particular tend to take a cosmetic approach to bond issuance rather than a functional one. And some borrowers get an easier ride than others. Miles Hunt, vice president, Euro-MTNs at JPMorgan, thinks it has a lot to do with an issuer's frequency of trading. He says: "What happens is people get comfortable with a sector and then look for the regular names. In the auto industry there are three types of issuer. Recently, BMW and VW have been getting the tightest spreads, then the big issuers such as Ford, GMAC and DaimlerChrysler. A third group of names like Volvo use the market for opportunistic funding at levels that make sense for them." Volvo has to make the best use of what is available. Volkswagen is rated A1 by Moody's, two notches above Volvo, and has issued over $4 billion this year. Albrecht Moehle, head of capital markets at Volkswagen, has some sympathy for issuers with less immediate appeal. He says: "There is no real recommendation I can give to these other auto issuers. Ratings and name reputation drive the market and in this respect Volkswagen has a big advantage. I have to follow my strategy and they have to follow theirs, because it is very difficult to achieve aggressive levels and everyone knows this." But although Volvo does not have the allure of some of its competitors, Lestin, at Volvo, is prepared to accept how the market works. This has helped to drive up Volvo's volumes in 2001. He says: "The funding we have done so far this year reflects our needs quite well, but we are flexible, and we like to maintain a regular presence in the market even if we don't have huge needs at the time." The attractive swap rate means yen has been used in 19 of Volvo's 29 trades this year, including its two biggest notes. But its longest trade, issued in June this year and maturing in June 2007, was a fixed-rate Kr600 million ($14.92 million) note. Morgan Stanley was the bookrunner and commented at the time: "We are still finding reasonable demand for auto company issues. They are well known and offer the best pick-up: around 50 basis points over swaps." Merrill Lynch is the arranger off Volvo's Euro-MTN facility and Dean Fogg, a trader on the MTN desk, says: "The auto sector has performed well all year, and spreads have tightened significantly. Towards the end of 2001 we may see some widening but it really depends on the forthcoming supply." The only tangible problem for Volvo could be an over-reliance on one sector. Hunt, at JPMorgan, says: "This year Volvo has done a lot of deals in yen because the Japanese funds in particular like short-dated trades from single-A borrowers. There is definitely interest in Europe and other areas, but presently the strongest bid is out of Japan." But unless Volvo offers wider levels it will have restricted access to Europe. Lestin, at the issuer, says he does not need to because he is price-driven and follows the best market. He says: "Where we place our paper has a lot to do with price. Most of our funds from the Euro-MTN programme in the first half of this year are what we would normally do in the CP market, so you can see we switch markets depending on the levels." This has brought some heated competition amongst MTN dealers for Volvo's paper. Lestin says: "We have an update coming in November and it is possible there will be a couple of changes to the panel. Reverse enquiry plays quite a big role in our set up, and you always like to reward good performers."
  • Belgium The $2.85bn six month loan arranged by Deutsche Bank for Euroclear will be signed today (Friday). The loan was oversubscribed but not increased. Expect more details in EuroWeek next week.
  • The global dollar sector took a pause this week, after a hectic summer of issuance, with just a handful of deals flowing into a market more focused on the falling dollar, depressed equity markets and the FOMC meeting next week. Appetite still exists for corporate product, however, with US telecoms company Verizon attracting heavy oversubscription for a $1bn 10 year bond for its New England subsidiary via Bear Stearns and Deutsche Bank.
  • A couple of not-so-common borrowers came to the yen market on Friday. Dainippon Ink and Chemicals issued its second note of 2001: a ¥2 billion ($16.38 million) five-year trade that pays a final coupon of 0.67%. It is the longest term the issuer has used, having done its first five-year trade in March this year. And Itochu Corp made a return to the market after a break of almost four years. Although Itochu Finance (Europe) has issued twice this year, Itochu Corp's last trade was in September 1997. This latest note is for ¥3 billion, goes out to August next year and pays a final coupon of 0.3%. The US utility National Rural Utilities Cooperative Finance Corp did two deals. One was for ¥3 billion the other was for ¥5 billion and both mature next year. Kommunekredit did a ¥600 million 2-year trade that pays 4%, and Orix Australia (Securities) did a ¥3 billion note. It matures this time next year and pays 0.15%. Svensk Exportkredit did five trades between ¥100 million and ¥500 million. They all mature in 30 years' time.
  • Apart from a handful of trades by unrated issuers such as Earls Seven, HSBC Investment Bank and SB Leasing Company, all of Monday's announced yen trades were single-A or above, as rated by Moody's. Triple-As took a 42% stake of the volume on offer, and all their notes had terms of 14 years or over. The shortest triple-A issue was a ¥7 billion ($56.71 million) trade from Landesbank Hessen-Thuringen. It goes out to August 2015 and pays a final coupon of 1.7%. International Finance Corp, KfW International Finance and World Bank all went for 20-year ¥1 billion trades. Macquarie Bank was one of the single-As on offer. It issued four short notes for differing amounts between ¥50 million and ¥100 million. They mature between September and November this year. The other two single-As were Linde Finance with a ¥2 billion five-year trade, and Credit Lyonnais Finance with a three-month ¥100 million trade. There were nine deals from double-As. Banque et Caisse d'Epargne de l'Etat Luxembourg announced its 12th ¥10 billion note of 2001. It matures in February next year and pays a final coupon of 3.5%. Kommuninvest I Sverige did a ¥1.2 billion trade that goes to August 2026 and Bank Austria, Credit Agricole Indosuez, Export Finance and Insurance Corp and Toyota Motor Credit Corp all went for ¥1 billion trades.