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  • Euro trading has picked up after a quiet beginning to the week as 25 trades were closed. And large volumes were being done. General Electric Capital Corp closed a euro1 billion ($876.50 million) trade via Dresdner Kleinwort Wasserstein and UBS Warburg. The note has a seven-year tenor and carries an annual coupon of 5.125%. It is priced to yield 46.6 basis points over the 4/1/2009 Bund and 25 basis points over the swap rate. Landesbank Baden-Wurttemberg also closed for euro1 billion. Its note has a three-year tenor and pays an annual coupon of 4.250%. It has a spread of 25 basis points over the OBL 134. ABN Amro, Merrill Lynch and UBS Warburg were the lead managers. Northern Rock did a five-year euro850 million trade. Its deal pays a coupon of 3m Euribor + 15 basis points and was co-led by Merrill Lynch and UBS Warburg. BNP Paribas and JPMorgan teamed up to co-lead a euro200 million note for Erste Bank der Oesterreichischen Sparkassen. The note pays a coupon of 5.250% and settles on December 14 2011. The note has a spread of 65.4 basis points and is linked to the January 2012 Bund. Elsewhere, two of the other landesbanks were busy. Landesbank Rheinland-Pfalz did a euro100 million trade that matures in August 25 2003. And Landesbank Sachsen closed a euro50 million that settles on September 1 2003. Morgan Stanley was the bookrunner.
  • Freddie Mac surprised the markets this week by making its new 30 year Reference Note issue an exchange offer, creating a $3.24bn line, $2.74bn of which was swapped for old paper. The minimum new issue size for a 30 year Reference Note is $2bn, but the US mortgage agency did not need that amount of funding, so priced $3.24bn of a new 30 year, of which $500m was sold for cash. The rest was exchanged for outstanding bonds due in September 2029 and March 2031.
  • Last week's Wimm-Bill-Dann IPO, the first international flotation of a Russian company for 18 months, has boosted fund managers' confidence that emerging markets equities will perform strongly in 2002. Philip Ehrmann, an emerging markets fund manager at Gartmore, said this week that there are "unheralded opportunities to invest in attractively priced markets". The optimism will please ECM bankers looking to build on Wim-Bill-Dann's success by launching further flotations from the emerging markets.
  • Triple-A rated General Electric Capital Corp injected some life back into a paralysed high grade dollar corporate bond market this week by launching a blowout $3.5bn global issue, the borrower’s largest ever deal.
  • Triple-A rated General Electric Capital Corp injected some life back into a paralysed high grade dollar corporate bond market this week by launching a blowout $3.5bn global issue, the borrower’s largest ever deal.
  • Senior German bankers were locked in discussions yesterday (Thursday) over the fate of heavily indebted German media company Kirch Gruppe. Other key creditors such as JP Morgan and Lehman Brothers are also believed to have been involved. Kirch is struggling under Eu5.6bn of debt and at least Eu2.3bn of contingent liabilities.
  • No other local authorities in the world have embraced the Euro-MTN market so whole-heartedly or in such a groundbreaking way as the regions of Italy. All of the nine regions in the Euro-MTN market have signed their debt facilities within the last five years, reflecting the increasingly popular trend towards alternative finance in Italy. The success of the regions' Euro-MTN shelves has not surprised Niccolo Ragnini, head of Italian public sector at UBS Warburg (UBS). He says: "At first, the market was somewhat of a cultural shock to the regions - dealing with rating agencies and fixed-income investors. It asked different questions to what they had heard previously. But none of the regions are disappointed that they have signed MTN programmes. Like any new product, it has proved very stimulating." Italian regions have only been allowed by law to issue eurobonds for the last five years. The Region of Lazio was the first to sign up in 1997 and set an example for the whole sector. One of its trades was the first securitization by a European sub-sovereign entity. Following that, the Region of Umbria signed the first wholly underwritten Euro-MTN programme in the market in 1999. And last December, Lombardy broke down more barriers when it became the first region in the EMU to be rated above the sovereign ceiling by all three main agencies. "Lombardy represents 15% of the Italian population, generates more than 20% of the Italian GDP and exhibits wealth indicators fully comparable with the major and wealthiest EU regions," says Raffaele Carnevale, public finance at Standard & Poor's. "Altogether, this highlights the region's national and international high profile." After a constitutional change in 1996, the regions have gained much greater responsibility and autonomy for their own funding. Because the regions are public entities there has traditionally been a lot of complex legislation involved in their funding instruments. But the trend towards decentralization has broken down this bureaucracy. It has also allowed the regions to break away from their traditional source of funding - the domestic loan market. As Ragnini, at UBS, explains, this was a much-needed move. He says: "The domestic banks knew the regions were reliant on them for funding, so they began pushing up their levels and spreads began widening. It was difficult for the poorer regions, such as Sicily, to obtain loans at their levels. As the loan markets dried up they had to come to the capital markets to promote their name and to stimulate investor demand." Ragnini believes that the Lombardy ratings (AA+/Aa2/AA) have proven the success of the changes to the law. He says: "The ratings really proved that the whole process of decentralization has been working. The agencies took the view that Lombardy was autonomous, so instead of aligning its rating with the sovereign, it aligned it with the EU's sovereign ceiling - an unprecedented step. Lombardy is now in a position to issue at very attractive levels." This targeting of the international capital markets has brought widespread investor attention. There has been lots of interest particularly from pension funds and insurance companies who have a desire for longer-dated paper. "Demand for the regions' paper is very strong," says Daniele Borrega, who works on Italian origination at Merrill Lynch. "The regions' big customers are the German banks who find their 20% risk-weighting very attractive." The sector's growth is set to continue. The Region of Tuscany is due to sign its Euro-MTN programme on March 6 (see front page). And the regions' have prompted renewed interest in the Euro-MTN market from elsewhere in Italy. "There are still more regions that will come to the market but the major interest at the moment is coming from the cities and provinces who have seen the success enjoyed by the regions," says Ragnini at UBS. This is likely, with market rumours suggesting that the City of Venice and Province of Milan will sign Euro-MTN facilities in the near future.
  • UFJ Bank, created out of the merger between Sanwa Bank and Tokai Bank, has put its name to a ¥1 trillion ($7.49 billion) Euro-MTN programme. Sanwa International has scooped the arrangership. It is the third Japanese issuer to come to the Euro-MTN market since the beginning of 2001 and the first this year. The last Japanese borrower to join the market was Sony Global Treasury Services's $5 billion Euro-MTN programme, which was put into place in December 2001. Sanwa Bank and Tokai Bank merged on January 15 2002 with Sanwa as the surviving company. Sanwa also has a ¥1 trillion Euro-MTN programme that was signed in November 1999. UFJ Bank's facility does not yet have a rating. The dealers on the panel are the arranger, Daiwa Securities SMBC Europe, Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan, Lehman Brothers, Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley, Nomura and Salomon Smith Barney.
  • * Norddeutsche Landesbank Girozentrale Rating: Aa1/AAA (Moody's/Fitch)
  • Kamps, the Düsseldorf-based bakery, this week rolled out one of the first ever corporate refinancings from Germany to incorporate high yield bonds. Its Eu325m of senior notes were priced on Wednesday, and formed part of a Eu725m package put together by BNP Paribas and JP Morgan. The bond proceeds refinance a bridge loan used to tender a bust convertible issue, and a Eu400m revolving credit facility replaces existing short term credit lines and allows Kamps to purchase the remaining 51% of Harry's Group, a French pre-packaged bread brand, by the end of 2003.
  • Kamps, the Düsseldorf-based bakery, this week rolled out one of the first ever corporate refinancings from Germany to incorporate high yield bonds. Its Eu325m of senior notes were priced on Wednesday, and formed part of a Eu725m package put together by BNP Paribas and JP Morgan. The bond proceeds refinance a bridge loan used to tender a bust convertible issue, and a Eu400m revolving credit facility replaces existing short term credit lines and allows Kamps to purchase the remaining 51% of Harry's Group, a French pre-packaged bread brand, by the end of 2003.