Top Section/Ad
Top Section/Ad
Most recent
Mexico paid a similar new issue premium for its $9bn deal last week
◆ What has driven this week's record issuance and what might threaten sentiment ◆ Why the Maduro affair is a wake-up call for the EU ◆ Resolving Venezuela's debtberg
New issue premiums were slim for the LatAm sovereign duo
It will take years and huge amounts of money to get Venezuela in a state to restructure its debt
More articles/Ad
More articles/Ad
More articles
-
Bolivia’s dollar bonds traded lower for a second consecutive day on Tuesday as left-wing former finance minister Luis Arce looks set to assume the presidency. However, some argue that Arce is the best candidate for market stability, at least in the short term.
-
emerging market telecoms company Millicom International Cellular notched a bumper order book on Monday as it raised $500m to refinance a bond maturing in 2025. After a tough allocation process, the bond traded strongly in the grey market.
-
Brazilian foods company BRF increased the size of a tap of its recently issued 2050 bonds on Monday, issuing at exactly the same reoffer level as a month ago.
-
Frigorífico Concepción, the Paraguayan beef exporter, could return to bond markets this week with a tap of its 10.25% senior secured notes maturing in January 2025.
-
As even the IMF asks Mexico to spend more to prop up the economy during the Covid-19 crisis, deputy finance minister Gabriel Yorio denied accusations that the country’s forthcoming budget was austere. Despite concerns in the market about the lack of policy support for the economy, some investors see value in the country’s bonds.
-
Latin America’s bond bankers said that the primary markets remain open, but investors will see limited new paper after Petrobras sold its smallest bond in several years this week.