The yen market saw more new names on Friday last week, and, although nine of the 26 trades that were announced came from issuers domiciled outside Europe (more than the average), continues to be dominated by Western European names. ABB Capital did its second yen note of 2001, with a ¥3 billion ($24.67 million) deal that goes out to September 2009. It has a fixed coupon of 1.36% for its duration. Nederlandse Waterschapsbank also went for a ¥3 billion trade. Nomura was the bookrunner of the 22-year deal, and it has an initial coupon of 2.7%. Abbey National Treasury Services announced a ¥500 million 15-year note. It pays 2%, and was the only trade done by a UK issuer. KfW International Finance did a ¥3 billion, a ¥2 billion and a ¥1 billion note. JPMorgan led the first one and it goes out to November 2013. It has an up front coupon of 1% before turning into a CMS-linked trade. The other two were led by Nikko Bank and have initial coupons of 3.5% and 4% respectively. The ¥2 billion deal is then linked to the Australian dollar-yen exchange rate and is callable after 3 years, annually thereafter. The ¥1 billion trade is a bullet and after the initial fixed coupon is linked to the US dollar-yen exchange rate. Kommunalbanken did a ¥500 million trade that goes out to November 2031. Daiwa SMBC Europe was the bookrunner and the note has an initial coupon of 3.8%. NIB Capital Bank also announced a ¥500 million trade, via SG. The note has a reverse convertible structure, also linked to a basket of equities, after an initial coupon of 3%.
November 16, 2001