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  • Private corporates made a welcome rise up the table this week, settling in third place with a 14% market share. US issuers were among the most active coming with four notes for more than $245m. Caterpillar International Finance issued two Eu100m trades. One of these was led by ABN Amro. The note matures in 2005 and pays a coupon of 15bp over three month Euribor.
  • Trades in the five year tenor were the most popular this week, with $1.96bn of notes issued, a 22% share of the market. Of the 54 notes traded, Italy led by volume. Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena came with a Eu135m note led by Dresdner Kleinwort Wasserstein. The five year note's redemption is linked to a portfolio of credit default swaps according to an undisclosed formula. Minimum redemption is 100% with a potential maximum of 139.26%.
  • Triple-A issuance regained the mantle this week, taking a 37% share of the market. However double-A names fared much better than last week and took the second largest share. Cofinoga issued the greatest volumes among the borrowers in this rating, almost double the amount of any other. Among the French bank's three trades was a Eu100m five year note that pays an annual coupon of 3.57%.
  • British American Tobacco's self arranged $1bn 364 day loan is heading for an oversubscription. According to the company it is considering an increase. Banks are scheduled to be signed into the facility next week. BAT's A2 rating was put on negative outlook by Moody's last week.
  • Rating: Aaa/AAA Amount: $500m
  • Although the final reply date for BSkyB's £600m loan will slip past Friday, the deal will close substantially oversubscribed next week, say bankers. For full details see EuroWeek 791.
  • Bruce Carnegie-Brown has resigned from JP Morgan, where he was a managing director and head of debt capital markets in Europe and Asia. A successor will be named in the coming days but Carnegie-Brown, 43, will remain at the bank for some weeks.
  • Frank Quattrone finally parted ways with Credit Suisse First Boston this week after he failed to give evidence at an NASD inquiry into questionable banking practices. Quattrone, who until this week had managed to hang on to his position as head of CSFB's technology group, is under investigation by NASD, the securities and stockmarket regulator, over allegations relating to technology IPOs and misleading equity research.
  • Frank Quattrone finally parted ways with Credit Suisse First Boston this week after he failed to give evidence at an NASD inquiry into questionable banking practices. Quattrone, who until this week had managed to hang on to his position as head of CSFB's technology group, is under investigation by NASD, the securities and stockmarket regulator, over allegations relating to technology IPOs and misleading equity research.
  • Rating: Aaa/AAA Amount: $300m