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  • THE Industrial Bank of Japan is in the initial stages of launching syndication of the £230m completion guarantee facility backing the Autolink consortium's innovative financing package for the new M6 motorway. The major elements of the long term financing package being put in place for the project by sponsors Amey plc, Sir Robert McAlpine (Holdings) Ltd, Taylor Woodrow Construction Ltd, Barr Holdings Ltd and Innisfree PFI Fund have already been completed. These comprise a successful £124.8m 8.39% secured FSA-backed bond issue led by Morgan Stanley in April and a £68.9m five part EIB facility.
  • THE HUNGARIAN government is forging ahead with the IPO of national telecom operator Matav on the Budapest and New York stock exchanges, despite the volatility in world stockmarkets and the sell-off in emerging market stocks. The success of this week's $213m privatisation of OTP Bank, the country's largest financial services organisation, augurs well for the $1bn Matav float -- underlying the demand for quality Hungarian stocks even in difficult market conditions.
  • India A group of four arrangers including Tokyo-Mitsubishi International (HK) should be awarded the mandate to arrange a $50m financing for Export-Import Bank of India. The seven year deal has put and call options on the fifth anniversary.
  • JP MORGAN has been mandated to arrange the forthcoming $4bn Euro-MTN programme for French mortgage lender Caisse Centrale du Crédit Immobilier de France (3CIF). The establishment of the programme forms part of a wider funding strategy preparing the bank for Emu and its impact on the future development of the international markets.
  • THE $15bn privatisation of Telecom Italia escaped disaster by the narrowest of margins this week, with the share sale being priced over the weekend and avoiding the volatility that has subsequently swept world stockmarkets. The transaction, the largest secondary share offering ever completed and the largest European privatisation to date, was effectively over by the time US and European markets dived on Monday and Tuesday.
  • THE LATIN AMERICAN new issue pipeline evaporated this week as spreads in benchmark Latin global bonds collapsed by more than 400bp and currency speculators, looking for a fresh target outside of Asia, began attacking Brazil and Argentina. Several billion dollars of planned new issues have already been cancelled and most frequent Latin issuers like the Republic of Argentina have announced that they will stay away from debt markets for the rest of this year if necessary.
  • THE United Mexican States and the Republic of Argentina are stepping up efforts to secure several billion dollars each in committed lines of credit from the syndicated loan market to shore up their funds in the wake of the latest financial market turmoil.
  • Bahrain Bahrain International Bank is making its debut in the syndicated loan market for a $75m facility.
  • * Swedish Export Credit has signed the first ever Samurai MTN programme, with a ¥500bn facility arranged by Tokyo-Mitsubishi. A regular borrower in the Samurai market, where it has issued 18 transactions since 1990, SEK expects the establishment of a documentation blueprint to speed up issuance despite the fact that each Samurai tranche will still have to be filed separately with the MoF.