LatAm Bonds
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The first ever international bond issued by government-owned lender Banco Nacional de Panamá (Banconal) performed well on the break this week as investors said the deal offered a healthy pick-up to the sovereign curve.
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Several corporate issuers in Latin America could be on the cusp of losing their investment grade status, warned Fitch Ratings on Wednesday, with commodities-related businesses at particular risk.
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Telecom Argentina said on Tuesday that it would issue nearly $389m of amortising bonds maturing in 2025 as a result of a successful debt exchange and raising $135m in new money.
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Government owned lender Banco Nacional de Panamá (Banconal) sold its first ever international bond on Tuesday, notching a bumper order book and at tightening — as several recent Latin American deals have done — by 50bp.
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As Argentina’s largest bondholders confirmed that they would support the government’s amended restructuring offer, the sovereign gave investors until August 24 to participate in the deal, with analysts expecting a high take-up.
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Argentina announced an agreement with bondholders on Tuesday to restructure $65bn of debt. The country's dollar bonds had rallied late on Monday as rumours circulated that a deal was close following months of negotiations with either side repeatedly rejecting the other's proposals.
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More than 95% of the holders of each of Ecuador’s 10 international bonds participated by Monday’s deadline in a consent solicitation that allows the sovereign to restructure $17.4bn of debt.
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Electricity giant AES Corporation is preparing a bond issue that will consolidate the debt of its Panamanian operating subsidiaries into one special purpose vehicle (SPV).
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Ecuador will be able to proceed with a consent solicitation to restructure $17.4bn of bonds after a New York judge denied a motion from Contrarian Capital and GMO for a temporary restraining order (TRO) on the process.
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Mexican miner Industrias Peñoles sold $600m of bonds on Thursday to keep Latin American primary markets ticking over as sell-side bankers expect only a trickle of deals from the region until September.
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Ecuador on Thursday afternoon agreed to delay the deadline of its bond restructuring offering by one business day after two funds began legal actions against it. But a US court hearing on Thursday morning was not promising for the litigious investors, and markets believe there is still a high chance of the deal going through.
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In recent weeks, Argentina’s public relations agency has been cramming the inboxes of financial journalists as the government goes on the attack in an apparent attempt to guilt-trip dissenting creditors into accepting its restructuring offer.