Yesterday was the busiest day in yen for some time, even including the stretch before September 11. But despite 53 trade announcements there was still very little activity below the single-A credit band. Triple-As did double the business of any other credit rating, with World Bank and International Finance Corp issuing most. World Bank announced three deals. They were for ¥2.6 billion ($21.44 million), which goes out to November 2031, for ¥1 billion, which goes out to March 2032,and for ¥1.3 billion, which matures in October 2016. International Finance Corp also did three deals, all thirty-year trades, two for ¥2 billion and one for ¥1.1 billion. Eksportfinans, another triple-A, did two trades. The first, for ¥500 million, was a 20-year note with a power reverse dual currency (PRDC) structure that kicks in after two years of a fixed coupon of 4.37%. It is Bermuda callable. The other is a ¥700 million note that was done via Salomon Smith Barney. It also has a PRDC structure after a fixed coupon of 4% for the first 23 months. DaimlerChrysler Co-ordination Centre made its ninth yen trade of 2001 with a ¥5 billion one-year deal. The group has made over 50 yen deals this year though. The note's bookrunner was Sanwa Bank and the coupon is fixed at 1%. Another issuer doing vanilla trades was Pfandbrief Bank International. It announced a ¥250 million note with Deutsche Bank as bookrunner. It is non-callable for the full five years of its tenor and the coupon is linked to the 3m ¥Libor rate. Republic of Austria made its ninth deal this year and its first of the year in yen. The ¥2 billion 20-year deal was led by Nomura and has a PRDC structure after a first-year fixed coupon of 3.5%. A number of financial repackaged issuers were getting involved. Angus, from Nomura, Apollo Spires, from Merrill Lynch, ARV International, from BNP Paribas and Eirles Two, from Deutsche Bank, were all issuing yen. LVMH - Moet Hennessy Louis Vuitton (Japan) KK did its second trade. It was a ¥2 billion note done via Salomon Smith Barney and goes out to March 2002. Nederlandse Financierings-Maatschappij voor Ontwikkelingslanden did a ¥500 million trade and a ¥700 million trade. Both have tenors of 12 years.
October 26, 2001