GLOBALCAPITAL INTERNATIONAL LIMITED, a company

incorporated in England and Wales (company number 15236213),

having its registered office at 4 Bouverie Street, London, UK, EC4Y 8AX

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  • Bankers Trust has closed syndication of the £30m debt facilities that will finance Hambros' purchase of Varden Plc's bingo business. The facilities consist of £25m of senior debt and a £5m mezzanine tranche. The senior debt is split between a £17m term loan and a £8m capex development tranche. The margin on the senior debt is 200bp over Libor with a 50bp participation fee.
  • HSBC has closed syndication of the £220m debt facilities backing Yule Catto's takeover of Holliday Chemicals Holdings. Syndication was oversubscribed, but the deal was not increased. The facility is split into a £120m five year revolving credit and a £100m five year term loan. Both loans are priced at 50bp over Libor but ratchet down to 40bp.
  • * BankAmerica Corp Rating: Aa3/A+
  • US STOCKMARKETS plunged this week in what many observers believe is but a breathing space from the tearaway rises of recent weeks. Both the Dow Jones and Nasdaq indices were down, the latter hit by faltering technology stocks. The Dow, which had hit a record high of 8584.83 on Tuesday, lost over 60 points Wednesday as investors cashed in on gains made over five straight days of records.
  • France Co-arrangers London Forfaiting Asia and Credito Italiano are preparing to close syndication of the $15m two year term loan for Banque de Bosphore. Creditanstalt and Prager Handelsbanken have already joined as participants and a good number of other banks should commit over the next week.
  • THE WORLD Bank will join US agency Fannie Mae in the superliquid issuer bracket by launching a $3bn to $5bn five year global bond next week.
  • THE WORLD Bank will join US agency Fannie Mae in the superliquid issuer bracket by launching a $3bn to $5bn five year global bond next week.
  • ARGENTINE oil company YPF broke a four month drought of blue chip Latin corporate bond issuance in the dollar market this week with a blow-out $350m five year Yankee bond priced more than 100bp inside the Republic of Argentina yield curve. The deal, led by Credit Suisse First Boston, was increased from $300m and launched at just 158bp over Treasuries at a time when Argentina 2003s were trading around 265bp and outstanding YPF 2004s were at 177bp. Although it widened out slightly to around 162bp on the back of a weak Treasury market, bankers considered the YPF bonds to be fairly priced.
  • THE MUCH delayed $500m receivables backed financing for Yukos arranged by Crédit Lyonnais, Merrill Lynch and Goldman Sachs is finally progressing with news that the arrangers have appointed a small group of co-arrangers. Between three and five banks will form the co-arranging group -- the deadline for commitment passed on February 27 with three banks signed up and two more likely to commit over the next week.
  • TRANSNET, South Africa's parastatal transport company, is set to sign a $1bn Euro-MTN programme which will make it the first South African issuer to set up such a facility. Deutsche Morgan Grenfell is arranging the programme. Transnet is a relatively new name in the international bond markets. Its debut Euromarket deal in July last year was a R150m three year transaction. Its second deal, a R2bn 30 year zero coupon bond launched this week, will be the first to be documented under the Euro-MTN facility