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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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A creditor group owning a majority of Barbados’s international bonds is set to bat away the government’s latest restructuring proposals, GlobalCapital understands.
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Ecuador took advantage of a strong start to the week to carry out what the government called an “unprecedented” liability management trade as the country continues to improve its image in financial markets.
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Defaulted Caribbean sovereign Barbados proposed two possible solutions to the restructuring of its external debt on Wednesday, though it stopped short of making a formal offer to creditors — perhaps in recognition of a warning from certain bondholders two weeks ago.
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Mexico’s largest locally owned bank Banco Mercantil del Norte (Banorte) will begin meeting fixed income investors this week as it looks to test investor appetite for Mexico credit with a new subordinated bond.
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Just two weeks after the IMF said it had reached a staff level agreement on the first review of Ecuador’s economic programme, the South American sovereign pounced on a positive start to the week in markets to issue $1.125bn of bonds that will be used to refinance debt due next year.
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Peru will meet fixed income investors in the US on Tuesday and Wednesday as the new second best rated sovereign in Latin America prepares a dual currency bond offering that would include its first visit to dollar markets since 2015.