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Fondo Mivivienda restarts issuance, but is not the best read across for most LatAm issuers
Issuers struggle over what concessions investors will require
Issuance in March was never going to be hefty after a record start to the year
Government borrowing costs are rising on local and international markets, and credit ratings are falling
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Chile’s head of international finance told GlobalCapital that issuing a green bond had helped the sovereign attract new investors used to buying lower yielding paper, making the deal a win-win for both borrower and buy-side. It is planning to bring its next green deal in euros
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Corporación Andina de Fomento (CAF) will sell its first public green bond in the second half of this year in euros, the development bank’s head of funding said at Euromoney's Global Borrowers and Investors Forum in London on Tuesday.
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Chile sold a $1.418bn bond on Monday, in the process becoming the first sovereign in Latin America to issue a green bond. The sovereign will look to repeat the feat in the euro market in the coming weeks.
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Peru’s return to dollar bond markets after four years on Thursday saw it clinch its lowest ever yield and price flat to or even inside its better rated neighbour Chile. Yet so sought after is Peru’s hard currency paper that the government is having a tough time persuading bondholders to let go.
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Peru returned to bond markets on Thursday with a dual currency deal that included a rare dollar issue that some on the deal reckoned had been priced the country’s better rated peer, Chile.
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Mexico’s largest locally owned bank, Banco Mercantil del Norte (Banorte), has begun meeting fixed income investors as it looks to test investor appetite for the country's credit with a new subordinated bond.