© 2026 GlobalCapital, Derivia Intelligence Limited, company number 15235970, 161 Farringdon Rd, London EC1R 3AL. All rights reserved.

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement | Event Participant Terms & Conditions | Cookies

Search results for

Tip: Use operators exact match "", AND, OR to customise your search. You can use them separately or you can combine them to find specific content.
There are 371,437 results that match your search.371,437 results
  • Six of Europe's biggest food retailers have had their credit ratings downgraded or put on watch negative in the last 12 months. And many supermarket issuers fear this will push spreads even wider. But the sector is fighting on. Two new borrowers joined the market in 2000 and issuance in the industry has accelerated by nearly 30% on 1999. But the downgrades have taken their toll. Koninklijke Ahold (Ahold) burst into the MTN market in May last year and finished as 2000's top issuer in the sector with $2.06 billion outstanding off nine trades. But after being downgraded from A3 to Baa1 in October last year, Klaas Springer, treasurer at Ahold, has complaints. He says: "Of course it has been difficult because of the general spread widening that has happened in the market. When we are talking about five-year issues the downgrade cost us 10 to 20 basis points. It is significant, that's for sure." And Springer is not alone in his discontent. Safeway was downgraded from A- to BBB+ by Standard & Poor's in November 2000 and Simon Lane, director of corporate finance at Safeway, is unhappy with the rating agency's decision. He says: "We were not supportive of the downgrade and feel that we are stronger now than we were one year ago. Our downgrading has added a few basis points to our funding. But we are split rated. Obviously if there is a flight for quality then we will suffer. S&P incorporate earnings multiples into their rating assessments and we fell below the hurdle on that score. But we will get there in the end and they will upgrade us." It is the widespread consolidation in the sector that has put pressure on the issuer's credit. Over-concentration in Europe has meant that companies have expanded into Latin America and Asia, where cost-efficient hypermarkets are a novelty. Carrefour has spread itself the widest and now relies on its home market for only 47% of its sales. And after a string of cross-border acquisitions Ahold is now the world's fifth largest grocer. And this trend looks set to continue. Wal-Mart, the world's biggest retailer is tipped as a bidder for the German group, Metro and Sainsbury's is rumoured to be on Ahold's shopping list. Lane, at Safeway, explains the trend but is not convinced it will be ongoing. He says: "There is an over-concentration in the sector. Too many players are chasing a mature market. Consolidation is one way of getting scale in a saturated sector. But I do not think that this will carry on. The spotlight has come off the sector. Domestic UK players have enough on their plates and any UK consolidation would be subject to regulation." But Fergus Kiely, head of MTNs at HSBC, which lead-managed the highest number of trades in the sector, is confident that the industry will not suffer as a result of weakening credit. He says: "In the face of recent downgradings it has to be remembered that supermarkets are a defensive credit. Looking at it from Joe Public's perspective, if you have to cut back on spending you will lose the new car rather than the food for your belly. On this basis it's safe to assume a floor on the credit." The sector's slip down the credit curve also explains investor's penchant for vanilla trades. Kiely believes that the exposure to credit risk in the market has meant that investors are reluctant to apply further risk. He says: "Investors have had to gain an understanding of the credit market and as a result of this have diversified their geographic base. Whilst taking exposure to credits they have shied away from taking additional exposure through the use of embedded options." This is true of Carrefour and Ahold. Both issued all of their trades in plain vanilla last year. Springer at Ahold, says: "In terms of maturities we have issued a five-year trade, a seven-year trade, some one-year trades and a three- and six-month trade, which were for bridge financing. They are all plain vanilla notes. We definitely prefer plain vanilla." An official from one of the top European supermarkets complains that the size of the treasury and work pressure is a deciding factor in the choice between plain vanilla and structured trades. He says: "The lack of structured trades is quite general. Anything too exotic and people do not understand it. We do not make a conscious decision not to issue structured trades but we are a small team and anything highly structured must be approved by the board. That takes time." But things are looking healthy for the supermarkets. Compared to the same period last year issuance in 2001 is four times greater and stands at just under $300 million. Matthieu de Bergeyck, group treasurer at Carrefour, predicts the issuer's next 12 months. He says: "We will be quite opportunistic. Our debt maturities are not that long. We'll have some benchmark issues towards the end of the year. We will do some short-end trades too, but it depends on conditions." And the acquisitive Ahold will base its issuance on future purchases. Springer at Ahold says: "Since we signed our Euro-MTN programme between 50% and 70% of our new debt has been raised off the programme. In the future all our funding in Europe will come off our MTN facility. But it does depend on acquisitions. If we acquire more European businesses we will use the shelf extensively. If acquisitions take place in the US we will use Yankee funding."
  • Domestic issuance: * Zürcher Kantonalbank
  • Strategists at Morgan Stanley Dean Witter will place themselves under scrutiny at the Euromoney International Bond Congress this morning at their “How to outperform European credit indices — 2001 update” workshop. Jim Durrant, managing director, head of fixed income research Europe, will revisit a model outlined by the bank at last year’s conference to see just how well the recommended strategy fared.
  • * Roadshows for the Eu180m IPO of Acegas, Trieste's multi-utility company, kicked off on Monday. Institutional books for the first Italian IPO of the year are closing today (Friday). Retail investors, expected to buy 40% of the deal, will be offered shares from February 19 to February 21. The stock will list on February 28. Dresdner Kleinwort Wasserstein and Interbanca are leading the deal.
  • The Republic of Italy this week provided the global dollar market with a much needed liquid 10 year non-agency benchmark, launching a $2bn transaction at record pricing versus agency debt and achieving diversification of its investor base into the US. The deal was led jointly by Morgan Stanley Dean Witter and UBS Warburg. The last sovereign 10 year global was launched in 1998, when Canada issued a $2.5bn bond, and there are only two other liquid non-agency bonds in the long end, the IADB 7.375% January 2010 and the World Bank 7.125% June 2010 issues.
  • Landesbank Baden-Wurttemberg has issued a ¥1 billion ($8.67 million) note. The trade was issued under the $50 billion debt instrument programme and pays a final coupon of 3.65%. The interest will be paid semi-annually.
  • Last night the market said goodbye to a friendly face... Rupert Lewis, we'll miss you and your Evil Kineval ways. He got a good send off last night in Blackfriars. But while the beer was flowing on Ludgate Hill, another dealer was rubbing shoulders with the biggest chin in football... Jimmy Hill was drawing the raffle at the money markets dinner dance held at Grosvenor House, which was organized for charity by the lovely Louise Mason, of CSFB CP desk fame. And yesterday Louise, Citibank's Colin Withers, Lehman's Scott Hindmarch and the rest of the CP fraternity abandoned their desks to pick up a few free toys at the IFR CP conference. Most were kept entertained not by the discussion panels, but by the vast array of corporate golf tees, slinkys and yo-yos on offer. Some dealers were dismayed when lunch turned out to be a stand-up buffet. It meant they had to juggle the freebies with the cheese and crackers. Lehman's Anton Douglas has only just warmed his seat on the MTN desk and he is off again, to syndicate at CSFB. But the show goes on and the chirpy Cristoph von Mallinckrodt has replaced him.
  • The Region of Lazio this week raised Eu500m with an innovative securitisation of payments it expects to receive from the Italian government to clear a healthcare spending deficit left over from the mid-1990s. The deal is a general obligation of the region and was sold as Lazio risk in a structured form. However, under the complex accounting rules followed by Italian regions, Lazio will be able to treat the debt as off balance sheet.
  • A change in Swiss law will lead to the IPOs of two regional banks on the Swiss Exchange in the first half of this year. The respective cantons of St Galler Kantonalbank and Luzerner Kantonalbank are selling part of their stakes in the banks following a relaxation in the regulations governing their holdings. Luzerner Kantonalbank will look to raise Sfr150m (Eu98m) when it issues 1m shares on March 12. This represents about 30% of the bank.
  • Lehman Brothers has been added as an arranger off Abbey National Treasury Services' $4 billion Euro-CP programme. And Citibank and CSFB have been added as dealers. The following dealers have been dropped: Credit Lyonnais and Daiwa SBCM Europe.
  • Lithuania has made an impressive and widely lauded return to the market with a limited and tightly priced Eu200m issue via lead managers Credit Suisse First Boston and ABN Amro. The 2008 bond offered a 6.625% coupon and was priced to give a 215bp spread over Bunds - 10bp through the interpolated Lithuanian sovereign yield curve. Since then, the bond has tightened further, and was seen at 185bp over bid mid-week.
  • The Euromoney International Bond Congress closed yesterday (Wednesday) with a panel discussion on secondary market liquidity, with some of the market’s largest borrowers offering differing views on how it could be best achieved.