Latin America
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Brazilian steelmaker Gerdau will buy back $1bn of existing dollar bonds after receiving over $1.345bn of offers from bondholders to participate in a tender offer during the early-bird period, taking advantage of a strong cash position after asset sales and a recent local bond issue.
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Santander Brasil has tested the country’s Letra Imobiliária Garantida (LIGs) covered bond regime with two privately placed deals.
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Odebrecht Engenharia & Construçäo finally admitted defeat in its attempt to avoid default on Monday, as it acknowledged that it would not be making a $11.5m coupon payment due on its $519m of 4.375% 2025 bonds, paving the way for a restructuring.
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Power generation and distribution company Nautilus Inkia is looking to give Latin America’s corporate bond markets one final burst of life in 2018, as it hits the road eyeing a 144A/Reg S senior unsecured offering.
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Patience paid off for Peru on Thursday as its status as one of the safest economies in Latin America helped the sovereign to a new local currency benchmark that received strong interest from international investors.
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Edgar Madinaveitia, a managing director in Latin American debt capital markets at Credit Suisse, has left the bank, according to sources away from the bank.
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Peruvian cement company Cementos Pacasmayo is trying to replace half its dollar bonds with a local currency bank loan.
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A Russia euro-denominated bond has taken investors by surprise this week, as emerging markets issuers seem to be taking their last gasps in the bond market this year.
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Ecopetrol, the Colombian state oil company, said on Wednesday that it would redeem a $1.5bn bond maturing in 2019 with cash and confirmed that next year’s $3.5bn-$4bn investment programme would be self-financed. Colombia continues to provide slim pickings for bond markets.
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Bondholders of Brazilian mining group Vale have taken the chance to decrease their exposure to the rapidly deleveraging company with relish, as investors holding over $3.8bn of paper attempted to participate in a tender offer capped at $1bn.
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Odebrecht Engenharia & Construçäo finally admitted defeat in its attempt to avoid default on Monday, as it acknowledged it would not be making a $11.5m coupon payment due on its $519m of 4.375% bonds due 2025, paving the way for a restructuring.
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Bonds issued by central American sovereign Costa Rica rallied as much as four points on Monday after the country's constitutional court gave investors a positive surprise, approving fiscal reform that should improve market confidence in the borrower.