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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  • ING BARINGS has won the mandate for a $100m IPO from Binti Minaraya (BMR), a fishing and frozen food holding company. Roadshows for the deal were launched in Singapore this week. Bankers said that there were few comparable benchmarks, with the possible exception of BMR's own listed subsidiary, PT Daya Guna Samudera (DGS), a fish and shrimp harvester and exporter.
  • Institutional investors eager for a new asset class snapped up the first securitisation of Japanese earthquake risk, issued by Tokio Marine and Fire Insurance Co. Joint lead managers Goldman Sachs and Swiss Re New Markets sold $100m of 10 year floating rate notes in a global 144A private placement. Investors' principal is forfeited if an earthquake of a certain magnitude occurs in the Tokyo area.
  • THE DOMESTIC retail tranche of the offering of shares in Brisa-Autostradas de Portugal closed heavily oversubscribed this week, providing yet another instance of European retail investors' recent conversion to the merits of share ownership. Over 5% of the adult population of Portugal applied for shares and the retail sale was more than 30 times oversubscribed, making the deal the most popular Portuguese privatisation to date.
  • CREDIT Suisse First Boston this week completed the institutional sale of stock in Polish software producer Prokom in what is likely to be last major offering from the emerging markets this year. The stock was priced at the bottom of the indicated price range of Z75 to Z95 to take account of the fragility of demand for emerging market equities.
  • GOLDMAN Sachs and Mediobanca this week bowed to the uncertainty in global stockmarkets by setting a maximum issue price for the sale of shares in Banca di Roma at Lit1,450, the mid-point of the Lit1,200 to Lit1,700 indicated price range they announced last week. Demand for the deal has been building slowly until this week when several sizeable orders came into the book.
  • * International investment banks are bidding for the mandate to lead the sale of stock in Airtel, the Spanish telecom provider. The transaction is expected to raise Pta500bn to Pta600bn ($3.5bn). Several US and European firms are pitching for the deal with some bidding at gross fee spreads as low as 2.5%.
  • LEAD managers Merrill Lynch, Credit Suisse First Boston and Nordbanken this week launched the $800m international sale of shares in Nordbanken Holding, expected to be the last major international offering from Europe this year. The deal looks set to succeed, despite its size and poor conditions in global stockmarkets, as it offers institutional investors that are still participating in the new issue market the type of high quality stock they are seeking.
  • Bookrunner Morgan Stanley Dean Witter this week successfully overcame worldwide uncertainty in stockmarkets to complete the $704m offering of stock in Benckiser, the household cleaning products company. The deal was one of the largest IPOs ever launched from the Dutch equity market and follows on from sales for New Holland, Vendex and Ispat.
  • Estonia Arrangers Bankgesellschaft Berlin AG, Barclays, Dai-Ichi Kangyo Bank, Chase Manhattan plc and Deutsche Bank signed a DM100m one year club deal for Hansapank on November 24 in London.
  • A DEFIANT Republic of Argentina took the bear market by the scruff of the neck this week and launched a Lit300bn three year Eurobond — the first from an emerging market issuer since the Asian currency crisis hit nearly five weeks ago.
  • A DEFIANT Republic of Argentina took the bear market by the scruff of the neck this week and launched a Lit300bn three year Eurobond — the first from an emerging market issuer since the Asian currency crisis hit nearly five weeks ago.