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  • Arranger Standard Bank has closed the popular $45m three year term loan for HBOR, Croatia’s 100% government owned development and export bank. After an oversubscription the deal was increased from $35m.
  • Members of the Croatian government have been in London today roadshowing their intended Eu500m probable 10 year Eurobond, with support from lead managers Deutsche Bank and JP Morgan. The presentation demonstrated the Baa3/BBB- rated country’s healthy macroeconomic credentials, but also reeled out a long list of promised structural reforms, showing that the republic still has some way to go before it fulfills its self-proclaimed target of “full integration with the EU”.
  • Credit Suisse First Boston and Banca IMI pulled off the first ever Italian accelerated bookbuild at the end of last week with the Eu2.7bn sale of shares in energy company Eni. The lead managers attracted enough interest to cover the book 1.5 times and price the deal at a slim discount of 1.7%.
  • A huge mushroom shaped cloud hangs over 11, Madison Avenue, the beleaguered house of Credit Suisse First Boston. Has someone dropped a nasty bomb on our CSFB friends? The ambulance crews representing New York's finest tell us there may be many casualties on the executive floor. President George W Bush is said to be watching the situation with some concern. What is the cause for all the police sirens? Who gives a fig anyway about CSFB, a more secretive institution than the Vatican or Mediobanca and one which has led many a curious observer up the garden path and round the mulberry bush like a bewildered Taiwanese tourist.
  • Dollar swap spreads meandered within a tight range this week. At the close yesterday (Thursday), the 10 year mid-market was 95bp over the new 5% cash bond due February 2011, while five year swaps were at 83bp over the re-opened 5.75% Treasury due November 2005. These prices are little changed from a week ago. While swap spreads have not changed course substantially over the last week, the swap curve has steepened appreciably. At yesterday's close, the two year swap was bid at 5.21%, while the 10 year swap was bid at 6.09%. Only 24 hours previously this curve had been 77bp, so it steepened by almost 10bp in one day. At the beginning of the week, after the long weekend, the curve was 72bp, and it was around 69bp/70bp at the end of last week.
  • Deutsche Bank and RBS are underwriting and arranging the financing to back UK power company Innogy Holding’s acquisition of Yorkshire Power Group Limited.
  • Deutsche Bank and RBS are underwriting and arranging the financing to back UK power company Innogy Holding’s acquisition of Yorkshire Power Group Limited.
  • Deutsche Bank managers this week received two internal memos, one from Rolf-E Breuer, and one from Josef Ackermann and Carl von Boehm-Bezing. They detail Deutsche’s ambitions for its newly restructured corporate and investment bank (CIB), headed by Ackermann and von Boehm-Bezing, and clarify management responsibilities.
  • Deutsche Bank has appointed Goldman Sachs banker Lee Zhang to head its Greater China team in global investment banking.
  • Dresdner Kleinwort Wasserstein has continued to expand its global debt team in North America with five senior appointments to its New York office.
  • Piraeus Bank, which has been expected to make an entrance into the Euro-MTN market since the beginning of 2001, has announced the dealer panel off its forthcoming euro1 billion ($909.44 million) MTN programme. The dealers off the programme are BNP Paribas, Credit Suisse First Boston, Deutsche Bank, Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley Dean Witter, Salomon Smith Barney, UBS Warburg and the issuer itself. UBS Warburg is also the arranger. The bank is the fifth Greek borrower to join the market. And following Greece's advance into the Eurozone earlier this year, market players believe there will be many more signings to come. National Bank of Greece joined the market in October 2000 and Stratos Chatzigiannis, head of capital markets at the bank, thinks that the Eurozone has made funding a lot cheaper for Greek issuers. He told MTNWeek in January: "Being part of the Eurozone and having the euro as our currency has driven spreads down. We've already seen this in the public debt markets. Previously levels were being posted at Euribor+15 or +20. Now it's Euribor flat." (See MTNWeek issue 214)
  • Electrolux will this week join Securitas in hoping to benefit from buoyant demand for strong triple-B credits offering diversification opportunities, when it launches a seven year euro transaction via ABN Amro and Goldman Sachs.