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  • The Republic of the Philippines this week ended 1999 in the same manner as it began the year, with the launch of a popular issue in the global dollar bond markets.
  • Peninsular & Oriental Steam Navigation (P&O) is streamlining its activities and seeking to expand its investor base. The London-listed cruise and shipping group has revealed its intention to seek a New York listing next year and JP Morgan has been appointed as the group's adviser. The US market has long looked favourably on the cruise line end of the shipping market and has built up a specialist group of investors and seen an expanded interest among generalist funds in the industry. The US listing may be accompanied by a modest capital increase. Although the group does not need to bolster its balance sheet, history shows that meaningful US trading volumes are best established if a foreign company offers new shares to investors.
  • Norway The Nkr500m facility for power concern Hafslund was signed this week after being increased to Nkr600m following a strong performance in the market.
  • While the most melodramatic of millenarian fears have largely dissipated in the past few weeks, there is a great deal of uncertainty about the direction of rates and spreads in the new year and the great majority of US swap houses appear to be going into Y2K with flat positions. If there is a great deal of corporate issuance and much of it is unswapped, then spreads could spike up sharply as underwriters hedge unsold inventory with swaps. Fears of rate hikes could drive spreads higher as well and tempt end users to lock into fixed rate debt.
  • * Bayerische Landesbank Girozentrale Rating: Aaa/AAA
  • * Lafarge SA Rating: A3/A
  • NEW ISSUE supply of internet stocks on Frankfurt's Neuer Markt is set to exceed even the most optimistic expectations in early 2000 as the market looks to have overcome the deep consolidation suffered over the summer to end the year up 42%. Valuations are pushing upwards once more with an average p/e ratio of around 60 and, although this level makes a minority of originators nervous of promising future earnings growth, the majority are more than happy to take on the business.
  • Polish telco TPSA this week capitalised on the continued strength of investor demand in the credit markets with the launch of a Eu100m tap of its Eu400m 6.125% October 2004 euro issue via Deutsche Bank and Salomon Smith Barney. At its current issue size of Eu500m the bond is the largest sub-sovereign deal from central and eastern Europe this year. The outstanding transaction was trading bid/offered at 142bp/140bp over the 6.75% July 2004 Bund when the add-on was launched on Wednesday.
  • The holiday season finally began to encroach on bond markets this week as issuance ground to a near halt ahead of the year end. That the market has remained open so long has surprised many bankers, with Y2K failing to bite - not yet, at least. Most syndicate managers were more concerned with co-ordinating Christmas parties than clashing roadshows as they had been earlier this year. And end of year bonuses are the numbers distracting many from economic data. But the last trading week of 1999 is closing with government bond markets in disarray. US Treasuries fell on Thursday for the fourth consecutive day, pushing the yield on the 30 year bond to its highest level in two years as strong data on the US and European economies raised fears of higher global interest rates. The benchmark 30 year Treasury tumbled a full point on Thursday reaching a peak of 6.403% before closing at 6.39%, its highest closing level since October 1997. The market had already fallen sharply on Tuesday following the release of US retail sales. Thursday's much higher-than- expected German Ifo business climate survey had pushed Bund prices down by a 1-1/2 points. The yield on the 5.375% January 2010 Bund now stands at 5.21%. Swap spreads widened in dollars and euros over the week but credit spreads have tightened, improving arbitrage opportunities considerably. But issuance dwindled as investors and underwriters started closing their books for the year. New deals consisted mainly of taps, but Barclays issued a slew of sterling and euro denominated floaters for KfW and various Landesbanks at high sub-Libor margins. Officials at Barclays declined to comment on the deals, totalling Eu1.35bn and £400m. Floater traders confessed a lack of understanding of the rationale for the aggressive issues and suggested that the paper may serve as collateral or a hedge against other Barclays activity. The pricing was seen as too tight even for the transactions to be league table plays. In the quiet market Heinz and Volvo took advantage of what liquidity remained to issue aggressive short dated transactions that nevertheless attracted strong demand. Heinz was the best performer, its Eu300m five year issue quickly tightening several basis points. Bankers are divided on what the first few weeks of 2000 will bring. Some feel there will be a heavy flow of business from as early as January 4, others expect the trend toward higher interest rates will deter borrowers, especially corporates - many of whom would anyway have to wait until roadshows were carried out. However, Freddie Mac is expected that week with a five year bullet Reference Note off its new programme and Fannie Mae will follow shortly after with a 10 year Benchmark Note. Reports of the World Bank preparing a possible $5bn global bond for early January were unconfirmed but all the frequent borrowers will be watching the markets closely in the opening days, eager to get their borrowing programmes off the blocks. Bank Austria, which postponed its dollar ambitions in December because of lack of arbitrage, is expected to launch its $500m five year transaction early next year. Greek telco OTE is expected to roadshow its Eu700m seven year bond in mid-January through joint leads Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley Dean Witter and Merrill Lynch. Australia & New Zealand Banking Group has mandated Deutsche and Merrill Lynch to co-ordinate a roadshow in early February 2000 to be followed by the launch of a benchmark Eurobond offering. Other deals in the pipeline include a Eu100m five year issue for Italian motorway operator Autostrade Torino-Milano via Mediobanca. Italian bank Banca Agrileasing is setting up a Euro-MTN programme and is expected to inaugurate the programme with a debut international bond issue next year. Mediobanca is advising the bank on the ratings process. And Caixa Galicia plans to launch a Eu600m 10 year issue of cedulas hipotecarias next year. No mandate has been announced and the timing is not yet decided. Meanwhile Crédit Foncier de France and Crédit Local de France have awarded mandates for their Euro-MTN programmes. Crédit Foncier has mandated Deutsche to arrange its programme, while Crédit Local chose Deutsche and Morgan Stanley Dean Witter.
  • Turkey's largest cellular phone operator, Turkcell, is set to price its second high yield offering today (Friday) - making it the latest in an impressive list of high yield telecoms companies to take advantage of the positive sentiment sweeping the sector. Lead managers Credit Suisse First Boston and Deutsche say the issue is attracting strong demand from a wide range of accounts and is already hugely oversubscribed.
  • THE REPUBLIC of Turkey this week took its borrowing in the international bond markets in 1999 up to the $5bn mark with the launch of a Deutsche Bank-led Eu200m tap of its outstanding Eu400m 7.75% December 2002 euro issue. The tap was launched at a spread of 353bp over the Bobl 125 or 364bp over the 4.5% July 2002 BTAN. By Thursday's close in London the deal had tightened in to 340bp over the Bobl and 351bp over the BTAN.