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  • Hansabank (Latvia) has concluded a euro25 million ($21.36 million) note to be issued on June 5. The note has an eight-year tenor and pays interest semi-annually. This is the issuer's second trade of 2001 following its euro70 million issue in February.
  • Gazprom's board of directors met on Wednesday to remove CEO Rem Vyakhirev, reviving the chances of the gas company's Eurobond being executed this year. Gazprom gave a mandate to Credit Suisse First Boston and Schroder Salomon Smith Barney as long ago as January for a Eurobond of undisclosed size and intermediate maturity.
  • India The sub-underwriting phase for the $500m term loan for Reliance Petroleum will close next week.
  • Aegon, the Dutch insurance company, raised Eu1.7bn from an accelerated bookbuild yesterday (Thursday). The offering of 55m shares was led by Credit Suisse First Boston and Morgan Stanley. The company initially intended to issue 36m shares, but the exchange rate and share price had gone against Aegon since the announcement.
  • Fraport, the Frankfurt airport operator, announced the price range for its Eu900m IPO this week, as investors indicated they were not fully convinced about the merits of the transaction. Investors suggested that the lower end of the Eu32-Eu37 per share range was realistic for the IPO, which is led by Morgan Stanley and Dresdner Kleinwort Wasserstein. However bankers indicated that the range was lower than the banks and Fraport had originally hoped for.
  • Fraport, the Frankfurt airport operator, announced the price range for its Eu900m IPO this week, as investors indicated they were not fully convinced about the merits of the transaction. Investors suggested that the lower end of the Eu32-Eu37 per share range was realistic for the IPO, which is led by Morgan Stanley and Dresdner Kleinwort Wasserstein. However bankers indicated that the range was lower than the banks and Fraport had originally hoped for.
  • The Eu550m loan for National Petrochemical Company of Iran (NPC), arranged by Deutsche, has been increased by Eu482m to Eu1.032bn. The deal was originally signed on June 19 2000.
  • The Israel Electric Corporation has increased the limit off its global MTN programme to $4 billion from $3 billion. Lehman Brothers arranged the programme in 1997 and it has over $3.2 billion outstanding off 12 deals.
  • Jackson National Life Funding has increased the limit off its debt issuance programme from $5 billion to $7 billion. HSBC has been added to the dealer panel.
  • JCDecaux, one of the world's leading outdoor advertising groups, has revived plans for a Eu1bn IPO that it was forced to scrap last summer. The group intends to raise the same amount as it planned last year before the markets turned sour - showing that confidence is at last starting to return to the equity markets. Goldman Sachs is the sole bookrunner on the deal, while BNP Paribas and Deutsche Bank are co-lead managers.
  • * Allgemeine Hypothekenbank AG Rating: Aa2/AAA/AA+