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  • The Republic of Peru this week demonstrated the strength of demand for diversification within Latin America when it received a warm investor response to its first international bond since 1928. The Andean nation issued a blowout $500m 10 year global bond followed by a well received $1bn-plus swap of its outstanding Brady bonds. Lead managers Citigroup/SSB and JP Morgan priced the 2012 new cash offering on Wednesday with a coupon of 9.125% at an issue price of 97.732 to give a yield of 9.481% and a spread of 455bp over US Treasuries. The deal was pitched just above the midpoint of the 9.45%-9.5% yield range indicated on Wednesday, which had itself been revised down from the 9.5% area of earlier in the week.
  • European bankers have been pitching this week to win the mandate for the eagerly anticipated IPO of Wind, the Italian mobile phone subsidiary of Enel. The Italian electricity company has been inundated with written bids from 19 banks hoping to win the highly coveted mandate for what is expected to be one of the largest IPOs of 2002.
  • Portugal Telecom International Finance has upped the limit off its global MTN programme to euro5 billion ($4.34 billion) from euro4 billion. Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria and Tokyo-Mitsubishi International have been added to the dealer panel. The programme was arranged in 1998 via Merrill Lynch and has $2.93 billion outstanding off 10 trades. The issuer has made five trades so far in 2002.
  • Ryanair took advantage this week of record quarterly results to launch a £100m share placing to finance its continued expansion. Morgan Stanley and Davy Stockbrokers lead managed the deal, which will be priced today (Friday). Ryanair announced on Tuesday that despite September 11, passenger traffic grew by 30% and net profit increased by 35% to Eu28.8m.
  • Volumes in the retail and consumer goods market surged in 2001. Outstandings from the sector grew by 80% on the previous year and outperformed percentage growth in the whole market four fold. But some issuers were more active than others. Koninklijke Ahold (Ahold) and Marks and Spencer (M&S) issued trades totalling $6.11 billion last year - an increase of 158% on their combined 2000 figure. But despite the issuers' success, both borrowers complain of tough market conditions. "Even before September 11 we found it very difficult," says an official at M&S. "We doubled the levels that we were posting at the beginning of the year but it was still hard to place paper - particularly with the Japanese investors being absent." Andre Buitenhuis, senior vice president, finance and fiscal affairs at Ahold, agrees. But he maintains that Ahold did not make concessions with its levels. He says: "A major problem last year was the bumpiness of the markets. But I expected it would be a lot worse after September 11 than it actually was. Of course investors were more cautious and reluctant but we had no real problems placing paper. We did not have to make compromises. We are in the food business and it is a defensive sector. Our spreads did not balloon out - they came in." M&S has closed 28 trades since the start of 2001, the largest number in the retail and consumer goods sector, and more than half of these trades came after September 11. An official, at M&S, admits that placing paper was tough in the first half of 2001 but that after favourable publicity from the press, market conditions greatly improved. He says: "Towards the end of 2001, after our public sterling issue, things certainly kicked off. Things had started to turn around for M&S and the press began reporting good news instead of bad - this was very good for investor confidence." And the good news continues. On Tuesday Moody's revised M&S's A3 long-term outlook to stable from negative. The agency said that the change recognizes a recovery in the company's sales and operating performance in the third quarter of 2001 and over the Christmas season. But John Hatton, managing director at Fitch Ratings, thinks the change is a little premature. He says: "We are waiting for more consistent data before we change our negative outlook on M&S. There has certainly been an improvement to show an M&S recovery but we had already taken into account some of that potential uplift. We will wait a bit longer." The Baa1-rated Ahold closed 70% of its 2001 trades before September 11. It has issued $4.44 billion since the start of 2001 and is the biggest borrower in the sector in terms of outstandings. But, unlike M&S, a large proportion of Ahold's funding came from the public markets. Four of its 10 trades were public issues and Buitenhuis, at Ahold, points to the ease of issuance in the public markets as a reason. He says: "We have very good access to the public markets and find it easy to raise the amounts that we require. Our preference for the public market ahead of the private market has got nothing to do with levels - simply amounts. We find we mostly issue during a time of acquisition and, when we do, it has to be large." But Ahold made its last issue in December 2001 and is now concentrating on organic growth. It has no immediate plans to come to the market and the same is for M&S, which after a run of six issues in 2002 will now reduce its trading. But despite this, volumes in the sector are up in 2002 compared to the same period last year. Whether it can maintain the rapid growth of 2001, with the absence of its most active and largest issuers, is questionable.
  • Bonuses in London have fallen by 40%-50% this year across most sectors, according to preliminary figures from executive search firm Jared James Associates in its salary and bonus survey for 2001. Despite lay-offs this year, DCM origination still offers the best renumeration. An origination officer with three to five years experience should have earned £60k-£90k last year, with a bonus of up to 200%, but for their more senior colleagues a 500% bonus on a base salary of £150k would have helped keep the children in school.
  • Denmark LB Kiel has the mandate to arrange a Eu50m five year term loan for Forstaedernes Bank.
  • Transactions increased: * European Investment Bank
  • National Power Corp (Napocor), the Philippine power utility, has cancelled its $500m seven year bond issue, after what bankers described as "complete indifference by Asian investors towards the deal as a result of uneconomic pricing levels". And in another twist to the Napocor story, the sovereign is now considering launching a bond in its own name so that it can on-lend the proceeds to the indebted utility. The transaction would probably be the same $500m size.
  • The UK's FSA is to launch a probe into split capital investment trusts, as allegations of 'magic circle' investing and fears of trust collapses continue to dog the sector. John Tiner, a managing director at FSA, told a conference this week that "there is a meaningful minority of [split capital] funds which are cause for concern".
  • * Enterprise Inns plc Rating: Baa2