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  • France will bring its budget deficit below 3% by the end of 2005 by cutting spending on health, freezing overall spending and relying on growth to increase revenues, its finance minister Francis Mer said this week.
  • The Eu900m loan supporting the acquisition of SchlumbergerSema by Atos Origin is due be signed on December 15. EuroWeek understands the loan is 50% oversubscribed.
  • Rating: Aaa/AAA
  • The dollar and sterling bond markets kept up a hectic pace this week. The dollar sector absorbed almost $10bn of high grade product while sterling buyers took down £2.9bn, almost twice the quantity issued in December 2002.
  • The dollar and sterling bond markets kept up a hectic pace this week. The dollar sector absorbed almost $10bn of high grade product while sterling buyers took down £2.9bn, almost twice the quantity issued in December 2002.
  • The immense success of the euro is plain for all to see in 2003. But back in the early 1990s, the prospect of a European single currency coming into being was far from certain. Indeed, what with Denmark rejecting European monetary union and then France accepting it by the slenderest of majorities, even the project’s most ardent supporters were seriously questioning its future by the end of 1992.
  • What has happened to the fizzy originators at JP Morgan Chase, whose debt capital markets divisions have been punching well above their weight all year?
  • Why is everyone’s attention suddenly focused on Germany? Just one year ago Europe’s former economic miracle had turned into Europe’s most famous invalid.
  • Why is everyone’s attention suddenly focused on Germany? Just one year ago Europe’s former economic miracle had turned into Europe’s most famous invalid.
  • REWE’s debut Eu1.5bn one to five year loan has already received commitments and syndication is due to close this month. The mandated lead arrangers are Commerzbank, Deutsche Bank, and Dresdner Kleinwort Wasserstein. BayernLB and DZ Bank joined the facility before general syndication.
  • Amount: ¥13bn