LatAm Bonds
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Mexico’s third largest lender Banorte will price its first ever Basel III-compliant additional tier one capital bond on Thursday after releasing initial price thoughts on Wednesday.
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French lender Crédit Agricole has hired Italo Lombardi from Standard Chartered as its Latin America economist and strategist.
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Argentine energy holding company Pampa Energía is planning to sell its peso-linked international bond on Wednesday, according to a filing with the local regulator.
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Marla Dukharan, group economist for the Royal Bank of Canada’s Caribbean operations, is to leave the bank on June 30 after six years, GlobalCapital understands.
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Argentina’s second most populated province is preparing its second international bond issue of the year and will begin meeting investors on Monday.
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Pampa Energía’s peso-linked bond plans and Banorte’s proposed perpetual paper are the picks of Latin America’s bond pipeline, as the region’s issuers ready another wave of corporate issuance, despite a weaker market.
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Argentina had market participants choking on their churrasco this week with a century bond that triggered mixed reactions but sent a clear message about the bond market’s extraordinary ability to back any story it likes the sound of. Oliver West reports.
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DCM bankers say that Taiwan’s Formosa market could offer compelling funding options for several Latin American bankers after Mexican utility CFE became the first Lat Am corporate to issue in it this week.
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Chile re-opened its domestic 2021s and 2035s on Wednesday as it looks to attract more international investors into its peso-denominated bonds.
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It is tale of the haves and have nots in EM this week as Argentina’s surprise 100 year bond received a $10bn book but Nigeria’s diaspora bond underwhelmed and prompted a widening of the sub-Saharan African sector.
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LatAm DCM bankers say they are expecting Mexican issuers CFE and Banorte to issue soon on the back of rating agency reports published late on Tuesday.
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As the Mexican peso hovers around its strongest level since before Donald Trump won the US election last November, Grupo Kuo has announced fixed income investor meetings as it looks to refinance existing debt.