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LatAm Bonds

  • Latam Airlines returned to the bond market for the first time in almost two years, printing $600m of seven year paper.
  • Paraguay came to market on Monday for a 30 year bond on Monday, picking three banks to run the books for its longest bond ever.
  • Brazilian airline Gol Linhas Aéreas Inteligentes received just $13.46m of tenders for its outstanding 2022s after having launched a buy-back for all $91.533m.
  • Investor hopes that the US Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) would retract a ban on US persons buying PDVSA debt were dashed on Friday, when the department made the situation worse for bondholders by adding Venezuelan sovereign bonds to the trading ban.
  • Brazilian pulp and paper producer Suzano and Chilean copper producer Codelco got Latin American bond markets going this week with smooth dollar deals.
  • Brazilian lender BTG Pactual will hit the road next week as it looks to capitalise on improving investor sentiment around Brazil, in order to issue a 10 year non-call five Basel III compliant tier two note.
  • Latin America bond investors cheered moves from the US government to up the pressure on Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro to leave office this week, but a side-effect of sanctions left PDVSA creditors trapped, to the confusion of many. Oliver West reports.
  • Bonds from two of the most important issuers in Latin America sank this week as they neared fallen angel status, but some investors said that there was a danger of overshooting.
  • Ricardo Martínez, Ecuador’s finance minister, insisted a bond the sovereign issued on Monday was necessary, despite credit analysts saying the country cannot sustain issuing at high rates.
  • Pacific Gas & Electric has gone bankrupt with $52bn of debt, blaming forest fires that seared California during 2018. Vale, with $11bn, has been downgraded to the bottom edge of investment grade after its horrific dam burst last Friday.
  • Following confusion over the effect US sanctions against Venezuelan state oil company PDVSA could have on US bondholders, the final picture is growing clearer and the unfurling scene is not a pretty one.
  • Despite some investors saying it had been clear for some time that Pemex was on a gradual decline towards junk status, a two notch rating downgrade from Fitch appeared to catch bondholders unaware as the Mexican state oil giant’s debt slumped in secondary markets.