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Latin America

  • Mexican state-owned giant Pemex will buy back $1.8bn of old bonds in the second leg of a liability management exercise funded by its recent bond issue.
  • New issue markets in Latin America took a pause this week, but DCM bankers covering the region were not overly concerned as recent deals issued amid the volatility began to gain ground.
  • Two Latin American companies on the path to recovery from precarious situations have found themselves somewhat stuck in their liability management efforts because of tougher conditions in new issue markets.
  • As investors turn their eyes to Mexico’s forthcoming presidential elections, Fitch said the country’s economic and fiscal resilience would be tested this year.
  • As investors turn their eyes in earnest to Mexico’s forthcoming presidential elections, Fitch said that the country’s economic and fiscal resilience would be tested this year.
  • Peruvian agricultural company Camposol has cancelled a tender offer for existing notes after market conditions led it to delay a new bond sale, but Lat Am bankers are not overly pessimistic about prospects for primary markets.
  • Aluar, the Argentine aluminium producer, will look into the possibility of issuing local or international debt after the company’s board of directors approved a $300m bond shelf.
  • Brazilian steel producer CSN (Companhia Siderúrgica Nacional) has more than halved the size of a planned tender offer after completing a smaller than intended bond issue last week amid market volatility.
  • Mexican state-owned oil giant Pemex will more than double the size of its 30 year bond issued on February 1 after receiving a strong response to an exchange offer.
  • Four Latin American issuers ventured into cross-border markets on Thursday after a deceptively calm Wednesday, only to be faced with a wave of volatility that had investors worried and led to wider pricing.
  • Mexican non-bank lender Unifin made its second bond market outing of the year on Thursday with a senior unsecured deal that came at the wide end of initial price thoughts.
  • Bankers said that the Dominican Republic’s Dominican peso bond sale was the highlight of a busy but choppy day in Latin American primary debt markets, though market volatility cost the sovereign heavily in dollars.