South America
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Brazilian meatpacker Marfrig on Tuesday sold $500m of bonds that will be used to fund cattle purchases that meet its environmental and sustainable criteria.
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Brazilian meatpacker Marfrig is looking to fund cattle purchases that meet its environmental and sustainability criteria through a debt sale that the company is describing as a “sustainable transition” bond.
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Compañía General de Combustibles (CGC), the Argentine oil and gas exploration and production company, will receive a rating upgrade from Standard & Poor’s if it is able to refinance a $300m 2021 note with a new bond.
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Three Latin America companies sold new bonds to buy back old ones this week as investor appetite shows no sign of letting up.
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Santander Corporate & Investment Banking (SCIB), Banco Santander’s investment banking unit, has appointed Marcel Patiño from Itaú BBA as its new head of Santander SCIB Colombia.
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Peruvian holding company Intercorp Peru issued more debt than initially intended on Wednesday after notching a heavily oversubscribed order book in its first international trade since 2015.
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Brazilian conglomerate Cosan returned to bond markets on Wednesday with a $750m 10 year non-call five year trade that bankers on the deal said landed close to fair value.
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Colombian airline Avianca will use a par exchange to attempt to tackle a $550m May 2020 bond maturity, offering noteholders collateral and potential for a coupon increase — if the company is able to renegotiate certain loans.
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Brazilian airline Gol reopened its convertible bonds for a further $80m last week, taking advantage of a strong performance of its existing bonds and stock to achieve pricing that the CFO described as “fantastic” and leave the company in a position to continue its liability management.
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Latin American borrowers continue to make up for lost time amid encouraging issuance conditions as debt capital markets bankers say a few more could sneak through to primary markets before the August break.
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Peruvian holding company Intercorp Peru is looking to tap bond investors for dollar and nuevo sol denominated funding as it seeks to refinance existing bonds and invest in its subsidiaries.
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Petrobras will buy back $1.79bn of dollar bonds to go with the $639m-equivalent it spent repurchasing sterling and euro notes last week, but the Brazilian state-owned oil giant’s debt buy-back looks set to fall below the $3bn target on this occasion.