LatAm Bonds
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Chemicals company SQM became the latest Chilean firm to issue internationally on Thursday, as the country’s corporates continue to take advantage of high levels of liquidity to pre-fund ahead of a potentially volatile year.
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Latin American DCM bankers urged the region’s sovereigns to accelerate their funding plans after Paraguay notched a negative new issue premium in the sole sovereign trade of the week.
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Latin America bankers said that this week Mexico showed again that it was a leading issuer in the region after the sovereign sold its second deal of the year to take advantage of remarkable funding conditions.
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One pricing and one roadshow announcement on Wednesday ensured that Chile continues to lead the way this year in terms of Latin American bond issuance.
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Latin America’s rising star Paraguay took advantage of low sovereign issuance from the region so far this year to tap existing 30 year bonds with a negative new issue concession, according to debt capital markets bankers.
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Brazilian media group and broadcast TV company Globo Comunicação e Participações will likely price a new 10 year bond on Thursday after setting initial price thoughts on Wednesday.
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Latin America’s rip-roaring start to the year took a slide down the credit curve on Tuesday with two high yield deals — to no discernible impact on investor appetite.
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Chile will return to international markets with a green bond to fund transport plans after its portfolio of projects received a favourable opinion from third-party providers.
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Fomento Económico Mexicano (Femsa), the Mexican conglomerate, sold $1.5bn of 30 year bonds on Tuesday more than three months after completing a roadshow as DCM bankers said that the decision not to bow to investor demands last year had paid off.
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Remarkable funding conditions drove Mexico to the euro market on Tuesday just a week after it issued in dollars as a bulging order book again suggested that investor fears over the government’s management of the economy have subsided.
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Mexico’s head of public credit told GlobalCapital that he felt the government’s economic management was winning over investors after the sovereign notched a heavily oversubscribed dollar deal last week.
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Embotelladora Andina, the third largest Coca-Cola bottler in Latin America and seventh largest in the world, will begin a roadshow on Monday ahead of an expected 10 year bond.