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  • Australia ANZ Bank brought a well received A$300m five year bond issue to market on Wednesday. Arranging the transaction for itself, the bank launched the deal, which consists of transferable certificates of deposit, to an enthusiastic market. "The deal has definitely gone well and priced in line with similar names," said an official at ANZ.
  • Just over a year after Telstra Corp last accessed the euro market for a large international bond issue, the dominant Australian teleco has returned with a flourish, successfully launching a Eu1.5bn 10 year Eurobond despite volatility in the telecoms sector. The transaction is due to be priced this morning (Friday), andwith the books closing yesterday (Thursday) the indications were that the deal had garnered great interest from European investors.
  • The two ends of the credit spectrum of the EU accession countries got away impressive deals this week. Single-A Hungary, the leading applicant negotiating to join the EU in 2004, issued a Eu1bn 10 year benchmark on Tuesday, the largest single issue from the region. One day earlier, single-B Romania blitzed a yield starved emerging market investor base with a Eu600m seven year blowout deal.
  • Hungary has issued its Eu1bn 10 year benchmark bond, its only transaction for the year, and one that the republic hopes marks its graduation to a regular investment grade sovereign credit in the eurozone market ahead of Emu. The bond has a 5.625% coupon, and was lead managed by Deutsche Bank and Schroder Salomon Smith Barney. It was hailed by other bankers as a solid achievement, but not a blowout.
  • The two ends of the credit spectrum of the EU accession countries got away impressive deals this week. Single-A Hungary, the leading applicant negotiating to join the EU in 2004, issued a Eu1bn 10 year benchmark on Tuesday, the largest single issue from the region. One day earlier, single-B Romania blitzed a yield starved emerging market investor base with a Eu600m seven year blowout deal.
  • Hypothekenbank in Essen has issued a £
  • International Business Machine Corp (IBM) this week proved itself impervious to investors' general aversion towards the technology sector by issuing a highly successful debut sterling bond at aggressive levels. Proof of its enthusiastic reception was an increase to £400m from the initially marketed size of £300m.
  • India BA Asia is waiting on a few stragglers before closing Tata Iron & Steel Co's $50m three year loan.
  • J Sainsbury has increased the limit off its Euro-MTN programme from £
  • K2 Corporation is set to issue a one-year A$20 million ($10.50 million) MTN on June 20. The vanilla floater pays interest quarterly. Morgan Stanley acts as the bookrunner. The note is the issuer's first is Australian dollar.
  • KeyCorp has increased the limit off its $7 billion Euro-MTN programme to $10 billion. IBJ and Merrill Lynch have been dropped from the programme. Bank of America Securities and HSBC have been added to the dealer panel.