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  • Lloyds Bank has received commitments from four of the six banks invited to recommit to the £190m refinancing of the £130m deal signed for Holmes Place in 2000. The four banks that have recommitted to the deal have increased the size of their commitments. Lloyds is waiting for one more bank to join the deal.
  • The office of finance of the Federal Home Loan Banks (FHLB) is to issue its first benchmark 10 year global in almost four years at levels that look likely to be well over Libor. ABN Amro and Citigroup/SSB will launch the deal, which is likely to be a $3bn issue, in mid-May, subject to market conditions. "If the preliminary feedback we have received is anywhere as strong in reality," said Bill Oliva, head of agency capital markets at Citigroup/SSB, "it is going to be a very successful issue."
  • The $200m term loan/FRN for China Merchants Holdings has received an overwhelming response from the market. A total of 20 banks have joined the facility with commitments totalling $420m. The borrower will be given the option to increase the size of the deal. Details are being finalised and the transaction is scheduled to close in the next couple of days.
  • Rick Watson, a managing director in the principal and asset finance group at Bear Stearns in London, has left to join HSBC as head of European asset backed securities and collateralised debt obligations. This is a new position created to develop HSBC's structured finance activities for its financial institution clients and investors.
  • six month facility for Hungarian Development Bank (MFB) will be announced next week. The bidding process is underway and commitments were due in by yesterday (Thursday).
  • Rating: Aa3 Amount: Ck1bn
  • Rating: Aa1/AAA (Moody's/Fitch) Amount: Eu50m
  • Mandated arranger Royal Bank of Scotland reports it has three firm commitments so far on the syndication of the £275m 20 year financing for the Immingham combined heat and power project. RBS is continuing to talk to further banks and hopes to bring in more in the coming weeks. Some eight banks were invited in to the deal at this stage for tickets of £50m. The arranger is also working on the launch of the retail phase of the syndication.
  • Secondary traders have been champing at the bit this week as signing of the Eu5.9bn facility for Imperial Tobacco has been postponed three times - delaying its availability in the secondary market. EuroWeek understands that banks were supposed to be signed into the deal on Friday April 26. The signing date was then put back to Wednesday May 1. And by the time EuroWeek went to press on Thursday, banks had still not been signed into the loan.
  • Interbanca has added three banks as MTN dealers to its euro3 billion ($2.72 billion) debt issuance programme. The named banks are Banca Akros, Bankgesellschaft Berlin and Interbanca itself.
  • International Lease Finance has upped the debt ceiling off its $2 billion Euro-MTN programme. The new size is $4 billion and the document update was completed on April 15. The programme has been mainly used for public trades, with over $2.33 billion outstanding off just five deals.
  • Cancelled new issues littered the US high grade corporate market this week as a meltdown in telecoms bonds infected the wider market and threatened an even bigger crisis than Enron’s collapse.