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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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The US Federal Reserve’s more dovish than expected stance this year triggered the return of Latin America’s largest telecoms company to the dollar bond market after an eight year absence, the group’s chief financial officer told GlobalCapital.
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Trinidad Petroleum Holdings (TPH), the state oil company of Trinidad & Tobago, is looking to stave off an $850m August bond maturity with a debt exchange and new senior secured loan.
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Latin America’s largest telecoms company, América Móvil, sold dollar bonds for the first time in seven years on Monday, returning to refinance debt and establish two benchmarks.
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Empresa de Transmisión Eléctrica (Etesa), the sole electricity transmission company in Panama with exclusive rights to the network, began investor meetings last Friday as it plots an inaugural international bond.
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Peruvian power transmission company Transmantaro beat pricing expectations on Thursday, as it clinched a $400m green bond that hit the sweet spot for duration, provenance and credit quality.
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Investors in steel producer Companhia Siderúrgica Nacional appear to care far more about the company’s ability to push out $1bn of imminent debt maturities than pricing intricacies. The Brazilian issuer had a far better time in primary markets on Wednesday than on its last outing.