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  • Over the last 12 months the UK loan market consolidated its position as the dominant force in Europe, and even showed some of the first signs of a pick-up in merger and acquisition activity. But bankers became concerned about the increasing presence of club transactions, threatening to undermine their roles on deals. Adam Harper reports.
  • Well received offerings from unrated corporates in 2003 helped to debunk the myth that ratings are an essential part of successful bond issuance. Indeed, the year contained many cases where investors looked past the absence of a rating and concentrated instead on the strong corporate story.
  • Rating: A3/A-/BBB+
  • While the offshore yen and domestic Samurai bond markets have continued to wilt, the Uridashi market blossomed in 2003 as triple-A supranationals and agencies took advantage of the huge Japanese retail investor base looking for higher returns than are available in their own currency.
  • Freddie Mac will want to forget 2003, embroiled as it was in accounting malpractice. The Federal Home Loan Banks also had some troubling moments. The problems were alarming because the market is used to perceiving the agencies as near-perfect. But though European and Asian investors became nervous, the US markets continued to fund the agencies at remarkably tight levels — proving just how integral they are to the US debt market. Sebastian Boyd reports.
  • The year’s strong beginning in the US dollar high grade corporate bond market petered out this week as many companies went into pre-earnings blackout periods and investors started balking at tight spreads.
  • The year 2003 was almost entirely filled with one long and extremely vigorous rally in the US high grade bond market. Investors seemed to have fully forgiven corporate America for the crimes and misdemeanours of the last three years, and were eager to buy anything that offered yield — and many things that did not. Danielle Robinson reports.
  • A private Irish investor will tap the loan market in the next few months to support the acquisition of Victoria House in central London. The £120m 10 year deal will be arranged by Allied Irish Banks.
  • Rating: A2/A
  • Rating: Ba2
  • Rating: A2/A
  • Rating: A2/A