Credit Suisse, Mexico and Cleary Gottlieb were among the big winners at last night’s LatinFinance 20th Anniversary Gala Dinner & Awards Ceremony in Miami. Following is a list of winners presented at the event.
Yearly Archives: 2008
Drop in Remittances Could Hurt Mexico
The Mexican economy could be severely impacted should remittances from abroad, currently flat, start to decrease, according to Donald Terry, manager of the multilateral investment fund of the IDB. “After oil, remittances are the No. 2 source of capital going into the country,” Terry tells LatinFinance. Currently 5-6 million families, already on the lower end of the social scale, depend on the money sent from abroad. “You’ll see poverty levels increase in Mexico,” Terry says. A drop in remittances to Brazil is actually a good sign, according to Terry, as more Brazilians stay home or return from abroad because of better economic conditions at home and the appreciation of the BRL. Overall, the panorama for remittances to LatAm remains stable, Terry states. “I don’t think remittances are going down. They are flat. But they are not increasing either,” he says.
Equity Players Chase Brazil Agriculture Assets
Global equity investors, including hedge funds and asset managers, are piling into vehicles dedicated to buying and managing agricultural operations and rural land assets. The deals are being done on a private basis, through private placements and individual fundraisings. “Well over $1bn [in equity capital] has been raised or is being targeted in the past three months for this type of investment,” says a senior ECM executive at a Brazil-based bank. “People like the commodity story in Brazil,” adds a Brazil-based private equity manager. “They’re buying the commodity itself, a producer of commodities or the land that can be used for production.” Among such entities are MSU, an Argentine outfit heard to have raised $200m with London hedge fund Altima for Brazil land purchases. Other deals have been done through direct equity investments in existing companies, capital raises for startups, and local private equity vehicles, called FIPs, raised privately to seek out deals in specified asset classes.
IDB Brings El Salvador A/B Loan
The IDB has closed on the first part of a $65m A/B loan for El Salvador’s Banco Multisectoral de Inversiones (BMI). The multilateral’s first loan for a financial services firm in the country allows the mid-sized lender to make long-term mortgage and small-business loans. The facility is composed of a $50m 10-year A tranche from the IDB and a B tranche that will undergo a small syndication. The syndicated piece is expected to be 5-7 years and reach about $15m in size. BMI is owned by the Salvadorian central bank. IDB officials tell LatinFinance that a similar transaction that adds a subordinated piece to the A tranche is also being prepared for another CentAm financial services institution. The IDB is also readying a loan for Costa Rican state utility ICE featuring an $180m A tranche and $200m B tranche with Citi as lead arranger.
IDB Loan To Support Paraguay Long Term Finance
A $150m conditional credit line from the IDB signed last week will help develop much needed mortgage and long-term financing in Paraguay, its finance minister Cesar Barreto Otazu tells LatinFinance. “The country needs to finance productive investments,” Barreto Otazu says. “Paraguay’s financial system cannot provide those resources because of the short term of the deposits in it,” he says. The loan will help strengthen long term financing initiatives led by Paraguay’s Development Finance Agency, a second tier financial unit created by the Paraguayan government. The IDB loan also will aid the country’s effort to boost meat exports, education reform and an economic census. Paraguay is planning to return to the international debt markets in 2009, the minister says. But it is currently implementing measures to improve the country’s rating and overall fiscal scenario. Upcoming elections also could help boost financial stability. “Once the political panorama is clearer in Paraguay we will be able to access the markets in better conditions,” Barreto Otazu says.
IDB Miami – Social Diary
Sunday April 6
6.00-9.00pm HSBC Cocktail Reception. Casa Casuarina, 1116 Ocean Drive, South Beach
6.00-8.00pm BCP Securities Cocktail. Marinheiro Restaurant, 1155 Brickell Bay Drive
IDB Readies Biofuels PE Fund
The IDB is preparing a novel vehicle to target investments in the biofuels and renewable energy space. The multilateral is teaming up with private equity (PE) funds to raise up to $500m in debt and equity to help finance emerging companies in countries like Brazil, Mexico and Colombia, Daniela Carrera-Marquis, head of the financial markets division at the IDB, tells LatinFinance. The fund, which has a 10-year lifespan, is expected to be ready within a few months and the IDB has already identified projects it expects to finance. The vehicle will be composed of roughly equal portions of IDB debt capital destined for long term loans to borrowers and equity capital from PE managers and their investors. The debt financing will accompany equity provided by the fund to emerging companies in the sector, which will be subject to the IDB’s sustainable development criteria. The IDB has used a similar fund structure to allocate capital for trade finance on two separate projects, but it is entering new waters by approaching the highly sought after biofuels and sugar sector. Brazil in particular is a recipient of an aggressive flow of funds from an array of investors ranging from offshore hedge funds to local PE, as well as corporates in the energy and agriculture sectors.
LatAm Banks Pick up the Slack: Brady
While the availability of debt financing to LatAm from international sources has slowed, the region’s banks have picked up much of the slack, according to Nicholas Brady, former US Treasury Secretary. He adds that emerging markets are an important part of global resilience thanks to a combination of better policies and stronger economic performance. “Mexico will likely be the most affected by a slowdown in the US since approximately 90% of Mexico’s exports go to the US,” says Brady. “And if commodity prices go into a steep decline, this will affect those countries more dependent on commodities for economic growth, such as Brazil, Argentina, Peru, and Chile,” he adds. In addition, LatAm has no subprime mortgages, and the region’s banks stopped short of engaging in highly structured, over-leveraged deals. “Banking system reforms led to solid local banks driving credit expansion, but with better asset quality than that of the United States,” adds the official. One of Brady’s firm, Darby’s, portfolio companies in Colombia, which is seeking financing, received multiple offers from international banks nine months ago. While those banks have withdrawn their offers, the gap has been filled by Colombian banks that have committed to complete the transaction, he adds.
LatAm in the Eye of the Storm: Brady
Latin America cannot escape the storm ripping through developed markets unscathed, warns Nicholas Brady, former US treasury secretary. “What is happening in this country can’t help but affect Latin America’s future,” says Brady in a speech at the LatinFinance 20th Anniversary Gala Dinner & Awards Ceremony in Miami Saturday night. “Because we operate in an increasingly global economy, it’s impossible for Latin America to avoid some collateral damage from our present malaise,” he adds. Brady compared the current US economic duress to the major systemic crisis the economy faced two decades ago when he was treasury secretary. “In 1989 and ‘90 remedial steps were called for, and we took them. And today with a banking system that faces systemic predicaments and an economy that may be on the brink of the deepest recession in a generation, that’s where we are again,” Brady says. However, he notes, while two decades ago it was possible to identify the borrowers and lenders, as well as their capacity, now it is not. “I’d recommend that we do what we did with the commission that President Reagan asked me to chair after the stock market crash in 1987 – namely to identify the market participants, describe the actions they took, figure out the weaknesses in the system, and put forward a solution,” Brady says. He adds that the process of de-leveraging and re-pricing will take time, but adds that a great deal of the success in the ’89-’90 timeframe came from prompt action. The official also warned against over regulating in response.
LatinFinance – Awards for 20 Years of Excellence
Sovereign Issuer: Mexico
Investment Bank: Credit Suisse
Retail Bank: Itau
Debt Deal: Creation of Brady Bonds
Equity Deal: Bovespa Holding IPO
M&A Deal: Vale-Inco
Structured Finance Deal: Nikkei Remittance Trust 2001 (Merrill)
Law Firm: Cleary Gottlieb
LatinFinancier
Sell side Jose Olympio (CS)
Lawyer Mark Walker
Lifetime achievement Bill Rhodes (Citi)
