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Rede D'Or rode over investor concerns about the health of Brazilian corporates, while Edenor landed its first benchmark bond
Books for the jumbo €5bn deal were more than three times subscribed
Brazil is preparing its first visit to the euro market in over a decade
First trade from a LatAm corporate since the outbreak of war in the Middle East
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Yields on Argentina’s dollar-denominated debt hit their tightest levels since early August on Thursday after the IMF increased the size of its financing package from $50bn to $57.1bn.
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The Mexican arm of Spanish lender Santander wrapped up a buyback of subordinated tier two debt on Thursday as DCM bankers said they expected cross-border issuance from the country to remain muted.
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The IMF and Argentina’s announcement of a new improved financing package came after markets closed on Wednesday, but bond investors say it can be positive for the country's sovereign bonds.
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Argentina’s bond rally may not have much further to run even if the country does clinch a larger deal with the IMF, as investors turn their focus to president Mauricio Macri’s challenge in retaining popularity.
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Any bond market activity from Brazilian issuers before October’s elections will be focused on liability management, said DCM bankers after Braskem announced it would be redeeming some of its perpetual notes.
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The Mexican arm of Spanish lender Santander sold $1.3bn of new tier two bonds on Thursday, with the parent company taking 75% of the deal as it looked to extend the maturity of its tier two capital.