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  • Vattenfall, the Swedish energy utility, is returning to the market for the first time in seven years. The company borrows through Vattenfall Treasury - which is fully guaranteed by Vattenfall - and is speaking to banks about a $600m refinancing.
  • Coop launched its five year Sfr300m loan last week via joint mandated lead arrangers and bookrunners. Dresdner Kleinwort Wasserstein and Zürcher Kantonalbank. The loan is being raised for general corporate purposes and to refinance bilateral facilities.
  • Despite having a NT$25bn dual tranche deal in syndication, AU Optronics Corp is also looking to banks to finance a NT$30bn facility with a tenor of five to seven years.
  • The market will see an explosion of deals in September as the pipeline builds steadily in anticipation of a return to business after the end to the summer holidays.
  • Arrangers Citibank, Chiao Tung Bank, International Commercial Bank of China, Kasikorn Bank and Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp have completed the $110m five year deal for DET International Holdings.
  • Today's loan market owes much to Minos Zombanakis, the man who claims to have spotted in the late 1960s the potential of short term Eurodeposits to be turned into longer term loans.
  • Central and eastern Europe generated an abundance of deals during the first half of the year. The market was split between deals that were relationship driven with tight spreads and those that offered banks higher yields. Competition for those relationship deals with potential ancillary business was just as strong as that seen in western Europe, says Citigroup's Bassett.
  • Amount: ¥20bn