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  • * Bayerische Handelsbank AG Rating: AAA
  • Philips Electronics is due to sign a $2.5 billion global CP programme on Monday, February 12. Citibank is the arranger. It is only the second Dutch issuer to ever sign a global CP, following Shell Finance, which signed its $6 billion global CP facility in July last year. Citibank arranged seven Euro- and global CP shelves in 2000 for Finance for Danish Industry, Electrolux, Prudential, Achmea Holding, Kerr McGee, CIC Funding and one also for itself.
  • Poland's Eu750m 2011 launched last year prompted a raft of new mandates this week including two corporates and two first time issuers. Bankers said that the sovereign bond has served to whet investor appetites at a time when Polish credit is back in vogue. Falling inflation and interest rates, a narrowing current account deficit and re-accelerating growth have combined to drive a wave of demand for more Polish exposure, with German banks and funds thought to be at the forefront.
  • Republic of Italy has ended the week with a 30-year euro150 million ($146.81 million) note that pays a single coupon of 23.19% at the end of the tenor. It is the longest note the borrower has issued since joining the MTN market in July 1998. And euro accounts for over 50% of the issuer's debt off the $24 billion programme, having raised $11.35 billion-worth in the currency to date.
  • The Republic of Portugal this week announced the establishment of a buyback window to repurchase selected bonds, representing a first step of a larger debt exchange programme that will be carried out by the Portuguese government debt agency (IGCP) throughout 2001. Under this programme, Portugal will repurchase some old less liquid bonds and will refinance them through the issuance of standard Portuguese treasury bonds (OTs) aiming at increasing the liquidity of Portugal's debt by concentrating it in larger issues that can be actively traded on the secondary market.
  • Ryanair, the Irish budget airline, announced this week that it will issue new shares worth about £120m (Eu188m). The deal will consist of 10m ordinary shares, representing 2.8% of the existing share capital. Michael O'Leary, Ryanair's CEO, also intends to sell 3m shares of the 30m he owns. He will offer the bookrunners 1m shares to cover any over-allotment. The capital raised will be used to purchase 13 new Boeing 737s. The company may also purchase further second-hand aircraft.
  • Denmark Handelsbanken Markets, a division of Svenska Handelsbanken, has won the mandate to arrange a $100m five year multi-currency revolver for Copenhagen Airport. General syndication will be launched at the end of February with a corporate presentation scheduled for March 13 in Copenhagen, after the presentation of the annual accounts for 2000.
  • Svensk Exportkredit issued a 31-year yen trade, its second this year. The ¥200 million ($1.73 million) note is non-syndicated and is issued under the issuer's $10 billion Asian MTN programme. The trade pays a final coupon of 8% and is the seventh yen trade to be sold off the Asian shelf.
  • Sigma Finance Corp (Sigma) has continued a busy week with a euro10 million ($9.79 million) note that matures in February 2011. It pays interest semi-annually. It is the third euro-denominated trade Sigma has issued this year, and takes overall issuance in the currency in 2001 to almost $68 billion. US dollar has been second favourite with $56.5 billion-worth of trades.
  • SMC Corporation has added ABM Amro as a dealer to its $500 million Euro-MTN programme. The dealer joins a nine-strong dealer panel under the arrangership of Nomura International.
  • Sol Melia Europe has issued its first trade of the year: a five-year euro340 million ($332.48 million) note that pays a final coupon of 6.25%. The trade was issued at a price of 99.52% and the bookrunner was Deutsche Bank. The note will be issued on February 9 2001, two months after its previous four-month euro206 million note that matures in March 2001.
  • The bidding war in the Spanish electricity market gained momentum this week when RWE and Energie Baden-Württemberg (EnBW) joined the contest for Hidroeléctricia del Cantabrico, the country's smallest power generator. Three rival bids have been launched for Hidroeléctricia del Cantabrico. The first is from Electricidade de Portugal, which offered Eu2.7bn and is backed by a loan arranged by Citibank/SSSB and Caja Madrid. The second is from Germany's RWE and offers Eu2.9bn for the company, and the third is from Ferroatlantica, backed by Energie Baden-Württemberg, which values the target at Eu25.8 per share.