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  • EuroWeek hears that Lloyds TSB has arranged a new debt facility for Pool Reinsurance Company Ltd. No further details are available.
  • Compiled by Richard Favis RBC Capital Markets
  • Compiled by Holger Kron, Deutsche Bank Tel: +49 69 9103 4468
  • Compiled by Holger Kron, Deutsche Bank Tel: +49 69 9103 4468
  • Compiled by Holger Kron, Deutsche Bank Tel: +49 69 9103 4468
  • Dollar trading dipped slightly from last week's impressive levels, but remained healthy. Over $2.5bn was issued from 143 notes, more than in any other currency. Rabobank Nederland eclipsed most other borrowers in terms of volume. Included in its seven dollar deals was a $50m issue via HSBC. The five year note is callable from February 6, 2004, and annually thereafter at accreted value.
  • More volume was closed in euros this week than in any other currency. Over $2.7bn was issued from 91 trades. German borrowers dominated in terms of volume issuing over $650m from 20 notes. One of the busiest names was Hypothekenbank in Essen. The German bank closed three trades, the biggest being for Eu115m. The note has a quarterly coupon of 5bp over three month Euribor and matures on August 9, 2004. Morgan Stanley was the bookrunner. Morgan Stanley also placed a Eu100m note for the same borrower and Deutsche Bank placed Hypothekenbank in Essen's Eu10m trade.
  • The beginning of a new month marked a continuing increase in MTN trading. Over $8bn equivalent was issued from 421 trades. The number of dollar and yen notes was separated by just one, while euros saw the most volume closed. Pfandbriefstelle der Österreichischen Landes-Hypothekenbanken closed more volume than any other borrower in yen. The issuer launched a ¥10bn note and a ¥700m trade. The larger transaction has a tenor of 20 years and pays interest annually.
  • Rating: Aa3/AA+ Amount: $750m global/144a
  • After a slow start the Nordic region is building up and a flood of new mandates is expected in the latter half of the first quarter. "There is a lot of activity in the Nordic area," said a banker at a US house this week. "There is a frenzy of pitching going on in the region." February started with the award of a number of large mandates including the Eu400m seven year revolver for the City of Stockholm. Mandated arrangers are Nordea and Svenska Handelsbanken.
  • Maurice Marchesini has joined Bear Stearns as a senior managing director in investment banking. Marchesini, who will work in the financial institutions group, is based in New York and reports to group head, David Platter.
  • Citigroup/SSSB has been dropped as an arranger from Nationwide Life Global Funding I's global debt programme. This leaves Credit Suisse First Boston as the sole arranger on the facility. Citigroup/SSSB does however remain on the dealer panel, which has also been boosted by the addition of Lehman Brothers. The size of the programme has been doubled to $4bn. The MTN shelf, which was signed in 2001, has $1.38bn outstanding from eight trades. The borrower's last trade was a $500m deal through ABN Amro last February. The five year note pays a semi-annual coupon of 5.35%.