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  • * Süddeutsche Bodencreditbank AG Amount: Eu100m Hypothekenpfandbrief series 308
  • * Volkswagen Financial Services NV Guarantor: Volkswagen Financial Services AG
  • Strong retail demand helped Portugal Telecom (PT) raise Eu2.2bn this week, despite a lack of interest from foreign investors, who continue to ignore the Portuguese market. The stock was priced at Eu9.4, in line with the closing price last Thursday. The shares rose above issue price on the first day of trading on Monday and stayed there, closing yesterday (Thursday) at Eu9.56. Merrill Lynch, Goldman Sachs, BES Investimento and La Caixa led the deal.
  • Pinault Printemps Redoute (PPR) launched an Eu250m three year floating rate offering yesterday (Thursday) via lead managers HSBC CCF and Natexis Banques Populaires, which were awarded the mandate last Friday. Priced at par, the paper yielded 55bp over Euribor at the re-offer level, which is in line with earlier price talk. By the end of the first day, the lead managers reported healthy sales at between plus 55bp and 58bp, with some investors still awaiting authorisation for credit lines. Appetite was keen, as few investors hold much PPR paper, but there was concern over the timing of the offering so close to the year end.
  • Railtrack will set up a Euro-MTN programme after eyeing the product for nearly 18 months, as first reported in CPMonth issue 6. Railtrack owns almost all of Britain's railway infrastructure, including track, signalling, bridges, tunnels, stations and depots. This is despite experiencing some difficulty after the privatisation of Britain's railway network in the 1980s. Deutsche Bank has been awarded the arrangership for the Euro-MTN programme which is expected to be euro3 billion ($3.37 billion) in size. The facility is being set up in conjunction with a $750 million Euro-CP programme which was signed in December 1997 and which Deutsche Bank also arranges. Together the facilities will be used to finance a £
  • Portman Building society has made only its third appearance in the market this year. It plumped for its favourite style of trade: a medium-length sterling FRN. "We were looking for three-, four- or five-year funding," says Gil Rosen, treasurer of Portman. And it went for a £
  • Renault Credit International has increased the limit off its euro4 billion Euro-MTN programme to euro6 billion. The Merrill Lynch arranged facility was isgned in 1994 and has over $3.4 billion outstanding.
  • Corus this week announced the resignation of its CEOs, Fokko van Duyne and John Bryant, following the group's recent poor performance. The Anglo-Dutch steel group said that "further major restructuring will have to take place in the UK". Recent company news has not been received well in the bond markets. Analysts say that they do not expect to see much improvement after the company announced UK losses of £226m for the first six months of the year and there are expectations of further significant losses.
  • Rio Tinto has issued its sixth one-year note with a $49 million trade that matures on December 11 2001. The FRN, which pays interest quarterly, will be issued on December 11 this year. Despite the length of the issue Ian Ratnage, head of treasury at Rio Tinto told MTNWeek last week that he is looking at longer dated issues. He said: "We will continue to issue opportunistically and are now seeing opportunities in the five-year maturity." Rio Tinto has $189.03 million outstanding off its $2 billion Euro-MTN programme. Ian Ratnage said that it was unlikely that the issuer would ever hit the programmes issue limit in its first year.
  • Sachsen LB Europe has been added as an issuer to Sachsen's euro5 billion ( $4.46 billion) Euro-MTN programme. Merrill Lynch is the arranger of the programme, which has almost $1 billion outstanding off 10 trades.
  • Citibank has scooped another two CP arrangership mandates, bringing the total it's signed this year to five. The latest signings bring to market the second Spanish issuer and the third American issuer of 1999. American corporate, Sara Lee, is set to sign a euro600 million ($648 million) Euro-CP facility on May 17 1999. The borrower is a major player in a variety of industries such as food and beverage, household goods and body care products. Famous labels include Douwe Egberts Coffee, Kiwi shoe polish and Wonderbra. It has operations in over 40 countries worldwide. The dealer group off the programme is to be confirmed but rumoured to include Goldman Sachs, Lehman Brothers, JP Morgan and the arranger. It is rated P-1 by Moody's, A1+ by Standard & Poor's. Spanish retail bank, Caixa de Barcelona, signed its $1.5 billion Euro-CP programme on April 30. It follows hot on the heals of CAM Global Finance, which signed its euro6 billion Euro-CP facility last week (see MTNWeek, issue 128). The dealer panel includes Goldman Sachs, Warburg Dillon Read and the arranger.
  • UBS Warburg has hired seven senior bankers from DLJ, six of whom had joined the merged CSFB-DLJ firm. UBS is in talks with as many as 18 more of varying seniority who, if talks are successful, are expected to join in the spring. Richard Ng-Yow, who joined UBS Warburg's East Coast operation on Monday as a managing director, never joined the merged firm. He had been head of equity linked capital markets at DLJ, but took a package on merger day. He became head of US equity linked origination at UBS Warburg, reporting to Mark Connelly, who heads US ECM.