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Americas

  • Argentine government bonds have sold off yet again as neither creditors nor the government appear willing to blink in a stalemate that is likely to lead the sovereign to default on May 22, when the grace period expires on $500m of bond payments.
  • Telecoms giant América Móvil on Monday became the first private sector non-financial company from Latin America to issue a bond since the coronavirus pandemic battered emerging market bond markets in March. But the company’s unique appeal to non-EM buyers means few conclusions can be drawn about appetite for genuine Lat Am companies.
  • The operator of Santiago de Chile’s metro system, Metro, found ample demand for a new dual tranche issue on Monday as investors continue to show appetite for highly rated government-related issuers even at tight new issue concessions. The borrower's state support means it is a in a strong position to do Latin America's first buy-back of the pandemic.
  • Prospects are rising of a return to normal merger and acquisition activity, despite the continued grip of the Covid-19 pandemic. Telefónica, the Spanish telecoms group, has confirmed it is in talks about combining its UK mobile business O2 with Virgin Media, the quad play telecoms firm owned by Liberty Global.
  • The Republic of Peru has approved a further $4bn of debt issuance to finance coronavirus spending just two weeks after tapping bond markets for $3bn.
  • Empresa de Transporte de Pasajeros Metro (Metro) could become the second Chilean government-linked issuer to offer bonds in the international market in less than a week, as investors say that the corporate market is likely to remain the preserve of the best-rated issuers.
  • With Covid-19 measures expected to add $4bn to Chile’s debt issuance this year, the sovereign is still to define the source of another $4.5bn of funding, according to the country’s head of international finance.
  • While emerging market bond investors are spending their days in the Covid-19 crisis battling with poor liquidity, cash calls from end investors, and even the odd new issue, debt relief has remained a threat, albeit only a vague one. But at policy level the topic is of growing importance, and what began as a matter for official institution creditors took a step closer to embroiling the private sector this week. Ross Lancaster, Phil Thornton and Oliver West report.
  • Boeing attracted a staggering $70bn of demand as it raised $25bn in the dollar bond market on Thursday, a sum that could fulfil all its funding needs this year.
  • When Ecopetrol, which has been talking about bringing a bond for a long time, chose to do so last Friday, after an oil price crash in the middle of the coronavirus pandemic, it took the market aback. Fridays, after all, are not when any self-respecting Latin American bond issuer comes to the market. But there is nothing typical about Latin America’s primary markets these days.
  • Corporación Andina de Fomento (CAF), the South American development bank, could follow fellow Lat Am multilateral Cabei into bond markets after mandating for an SEC-registered US dollar deal.
  • SSA
    The European Investment Bank and the Region of Madrid stood out in the public sector bond market this week, with the former achieving its biggest ever order book for a euro benchmark.