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LatAm Bonds

  • Honduran lender Banco Atlántida will meet bond investors ahead of a proposed green bond as Latin American primary markets slowly creak into life.
  • Brazilian pulp and paper producer Suzano Papel e Celulose’s CFO told GlobalCapital that he believes the company would have had to pay a higher rate on its latest dollar bond had it chosen to issue immediately after its roadshow.
  • Brazilian pulp and paper producer Suzano Papel e Celulose’s CFO told GlobalCapital that he believes the company would have had to pay a higher rate on its latest dollar bond had it chosen to issue immediately after its roadshow.
  • CEE
    The Middle East is continuing its domination of the CEEMEA primary market and even the Latin America new issue market is starting to see some action as a run of successful bonds in the last fortnight is helping to bolster investor confidence.
  • Argentine state-owned oil and gas company YPF said on Tuesday that it would buy back $176.245m of the $452.198m in dollar bonds it is due to repay on December 19.
  • Brazilian state-owned development bank Banco Nacional de Desenvolvimento Econômico e Social (BNDES) will buy back nearly $650m of existing bonds, including over half of its existing green bond.
  • Latin American DCM bankers are hoping that Brazilian pulp and paper producer Suzano Papel e Celulose gave the market the fillip it needed as the borrower enjoyed smooth execution on a surprise outing on Monday.
  • Soft demand and higher costs continue to hit Grupo Kaltex, leading Standard & Poor’s to downgrade the Mexican textiles company to B- last week and maintain the bonds on negative outlook.
  • Syndicate bankers say more Latin American issuers could follow Argentine oil and gas company YPF and Brazilian state-owned bank BNDES in buying back existing bonds as low dollar prices make tenders attractive and can provide investors with liquidity.
  • Owners of Barbados’s international bonds are set to put up resistance to the sovereign’s restructuring plans, complaining that they have had poor communication from the defaulted government.
  • Some emerging markets (EM) syndicate bankers in New York are daring to dream that there could be new issuance from Latin America next week, but several buy-side players are less than enthusiastic at the prospect of new deals.
  • With dollar markets requiring hefty concessions for Latin American issuers, the only new issue activity from the region since early July has arrived in the form of Santander Chile’s Swiss franc trade at the beginning of the month.