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  • Australia The Austereo IPO will proceed today (Friday), according to bankers close to the deal. Credit Suisse First Boston, Macquarie Bank and Merrill Lynch will begin marketing the circa A$500m issue, which will involve the spin-off of the Austereo assets from listed company Village Roadshow.
  • Bank of East Asia (BEA) is set for a strong international reception early next week when it launches its debut subordinated debt issue. The $500m 10 year non-call five lower tier 2 deal is now likely to be priced on Monday, following a slight delay in the roadshow to accommodate last Monday's Martin Luther King Day in the US. JP Morgan is lead manager for the Baa2/BBB rated deal, which is being launched through BEA subsidiary East Asia Financial Holding. Barclays Capital is co-manager.
  • Telia, the Swedish telecom company, has made its first issue in the Euro-MTN market this year with a six-year FRN that pays a final coupon of euribor + 0.075%. The note will be issued on February 2 2001 and the bookrunner off the issue is Swedbank. The note is only Telia's sixth issue since it signed its $2 billion Euro-MTN programme in November 1997. All of Telia's issues in the last 12 months have been denominated in euro.
  • Bankers covering central and eastern Europe are eagerly awaiting news of three sovereign mandates for euro denominated issues. The deals - for Croatia, Lithuania and Slovenia - will follow the year's first new offering from Poland. The Republic of Poland starts the European roadshow for its minimum Eu500m 10 year deal on Monday. Deutsche Bank and Merrill Lynch are lead managing the deal, which will be Poland's first since its blowout Eu600m 10 year deal last March, led by BNP Paribas and Credit Suisse First Boston.
  • Mitsubishi Electric Finance has made its first foray into the Euro-MTN market this year with three trades, all maturing at different times. The first, a ¥5 billion ($42.38 million) note matures on November 29 2001 and pays a single final coupon of 0.57%. The second trade, which goes out to January 30 2002, is for ¥1 billion and pays 0.55%. The third, also a ¥1 billion note, matures on January 30 2003 and pays interest semi-annually. Since the beginning of 2000 the issuer has raised $248.69 million-worth of debt off its Euro-MTN programme from 13 yen deals.
  • Long-dated yen trades were a theme, with four issuers selling 20-year private placements. Bayerische Landesbank and African Development Bank both issued ¥500 million ($4.23 million). The first pays a final coupon of 2.5% and pays interest semi-annually. The second pays a final coupon of 3.6%. Export Finance & Insurance Corp (EFIC) and Hamburgische Landesbank issued notes of ¥1.1 billion, paying a final coupon of 3.65%, and ¥1 billion, paying a 4% final coupon, respectively.
  • Ukraine has been in discussions with the Paris Club to agree on an agenda for talks to reschedule around $700m of debt, with early March certain to be the starting date. The Caa1 republic faces a $500m shortfall in reserves to meet its $2bn 2001 international obligations. Vitali Lisovenko, head of external debt at the Ukrainian finance ministry, told EuroWeek that he expects the Paris Club talks on basic principles of the restructuring to take only a few days, with follow-on bilateral talks with each of the country's 10 sovereign creditors lasting some months.
  • A celebratory signing was held this week at the Armourer's Hall in London for the £275m (increased from £200m) five year revolving credit for Courts plc, the high street furniture and electrical appliance retailer. Arrangers of the deal are Barclays Capital, Royal Bank of Scotland and Scotiabank. The loan carries a margin of 125bp over Libor and offers a commitment fee of 62.5bp.
  • Globals * Bank of America
  • * Banque Fédérative du Crédit Mutuel
  • A bank meeting will be held in Holland today (Friday) for the $3bn 364 day interim financing backing Dutch publisher VNU's purchase of US based market research company ACNielsen. The loan is arranged by Merrill Lynch, and before the launch to syndication ABN Amro joined as joint lead arranger and facility agent.
  • British Telecommunications' Eu9.7bn equivalent transaction dominated the international market this week as investors prepared to absorb the next batch of telecoms supply. The six tranche jumbo offering in euros and sterling, launched on Thursday by lead managers Barclays Capital, Deutsche and HSBC CCF, was originally marketed as a Eu5bn package, but the deal was increased in response to huge demand. The two, three, five and 10 year euro tranches will be priced today (Friday) at the tight end of initial talk, while the £400m five year paper was set yesterday afternoon at 197bp over Gilts and the £700m 15 year tranche at 267bp.