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Equatorial Clinches Celpa Buy

Brazil’s Equatorial Energia has agreed to purchase control of power distributor Centrais Eletricas do Para (Celpa), it says. Equatorial will pay a nominal price of BRL1.00 for 39.1m shares, or 61.37% of the indebted unit of Grupo Rede. The agreement puts an end to the saga that started with Celpa filing for bankruptcy protection in February, citing deterioration in its finances. The distributor had also presented a restructuring plan to creditors. Equatorial is controlled by private-equity fund Vinci Partners Investimentos, which is expected to merge Celpa with its Companhia Energetica do Maranhao (Cemar).

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Infonacot Talks Price

Mexico’s Instituto Fonacot is heard looking to pay TIIE+50bp-area for a MXP1bn ($78m) second reopening of its 2014 domestic bonds. The sale is scheduled for Thursday. A 15% greenshoe is possible. The Mexican state-run lender priced the original MXP1.67bn 3-year bonds at TIIE+65bp in December 2011, and in March emerged for another MXP1.15bn at the same spread. Scotia and BBVA Bancomer are managing the transaction, rated AAA on a local scale.

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Mexico Toll Road Aims for Local Financing

The Monterrey-Saltillo toll road plans to raise some MXP4bn ($311m) in Mexico’s domestic bond market, according to sources familiar with the transaction, likely in November. The idea is to sell UDI-denominated notes with maturities of 22 or 23 years, with proceeds repaying bank loans and subordinated debt with the government Fonadin fund. The toll road, owned by Spain’s Isolux-Cosan, has been operational for almost a year. Santander, ING and Bank of America Merrill Lynch are bookrunners on the transaction.

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Peruvian Retailer Sets IPO Timing

Inretail Peru has set October 3 to price its IPO, according to sources with knowledge of the transaction expected to raise $400m. The Intercorp unit operating retail assets including Inkapharma drugstores and Plaza Vea supermarkets is now meeting investors ahead of the sale. It aims to sell 20.05m shares at $19-$22 each, in both local and international tranches. The transaction will raise funds for expansion and offers investors rare exposure to Peru’s retail sector. BTG Pactual, JPMorgan and Morgan Stanley are managing the transaction, likely to be Peru’s largest IPO since 2006. It would be the first sizeable Peruvian equity sale since a $265m follow-on from Pacasmayo in February.

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Rio Signs CAF Loans

CAF has agreed to make two loans to the Brazilian state of Rio de Janeiro, totalling $419m, the multilateral lender says, with money coming from CAF’s emergency funding program. The first, a $319.6m loan, will fund road work and address damage done by 2011 rains, and the second, for $100m, will help rebuild areas they affected. CAF does not disclose the interest rates.

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Santander Mexico Prices $4.1bn IPO

Santander Mexico has priced a MXP52.81bn ($4.11bn) IPO, according to sources familiar with the transaction, coming at the midpoint of its price range and delivering Mexico’s largest-ever equity debut. With heavy demand, the issuer could have priced at the top of the range, but left breathing room for investors, many of whom saw fair value at the lower end. In the largest equity sale in LatAm since 2010, the bank priced 1.69bn secondary shares, assuming the exercise of a 15% greenshoe, at MXP31.25 each, versus a MXP29.00-MXP33.50 range. Investors appeared to get their wish of a discount to peer Banorte, with the midpoint seen implying about 10x-11x 2013 price/earnings versus Banorte’s 12x. “This is a high-quality bank and has better operating metrics than Banorte,” says a participating EM portfolio manager, noting low operating costs, and high efficiency and profitability versus the system. “They could have priced at the top of the range, but this is a smarter level. They leave something for investors,” says an ECM banker away from the deal, noting this was a must considering the challenging nature of LatAm new issuance this year. The deal, said to be multiple times oversubscribed values the bank at more than $17bn, and was to be divided into 1.18bn shares in the form of ADRs, representing about 80% of the total transaction, and a Mexican portion made up of 294m shares. The floating of a nearly 25% stake in the Mexican unit will allow the Spanish parent to shore up its finances. Santander now plans to IPO its other major subsidiaries, including Argentina’s Santander Rio. Investors receive exposure to the fourth-largest bank in a system expected to see strong credit growth as Mexico’s economy grows. Santander, UBS, Deutsche Bank and Bank of America Merrill Lynch were global coordinators on the transaction. Barclays, Citi, Credit Suisse, Goldman Sachs, Itau, JPMorgan and RBC were joint bookrunners. Santander, Banamex, BBVA Bancomer and HSBC managed the domestic portion

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Cosan JV Unit Readies Loan

Brazilian sugar, ethanol and bioenergy producer Raizen is planning to launch a $450m, 3-year term loan within the next month, say sources familiar with the energy company’s plans. A date for the bank meeting has not yet been announced. Led by Citi and HSBC, the facility will raise funds for refinancing existing debt. Raizen is a joint venture between Cosan and Royal Dutch Shell.

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ECM Awaits Santander Mexico IPO

Santander Mexico is hoping recent supportive signs in the equity markets translate into a successful IPO, when it prices the highly-anticipated MXP49.01bn-MXP56.61bn ($3.72bn-$4.30bn) deal this evening. The well-regarded bank is heard with a book multiple times oversubscribed, with both bankers and investors citing strong equity funds flows last week following European Central Bank and US fed announcements as a positive sign. The close of a $5.17bn tender for shares of Brazil’s Redecard could also mean excess funds looking for reapplication to LatAm financial stocks. As with all equity deals, though, investors say it will come down to price. “The market is ready and people will be receptive. This could be expensive, but Mexico is expensive,” says a London-based EM portfolio manager looking at the deal. Most investors see a pickup to Banorte, the closest publicly-traded comparable, with Banorte trading at 12x 2013 price/earnings and Santander seen offering 10x-11.5x at the price range it gave at launch. “Given the interest, they can price at the top of the range. It is a good banking franchise, but we like to see a margin of safety,” Maclovio Pina, senior equity analyst at Morningstar, tells LatinFinance. His shop finds fair value at MXP29.00 per share, at the low end of the MXP29.00-MXP33.50 price range, a valuation hinging on the bank’s ability to control its main cost pillars while its balance sheet expands going forward. Valuing the bank at more than $17bn, Santander will offer 1.69bn secondary shares, including a 15% greenshoe. The deal is divided into an international tranche of up to 1.18bn shares in the form of ADRs, representing 80% of the total transaction, and a Mexican portion made up of 294m shares. Bankers away from and on the deal say the region’s new issue markets need a well-bid sale pricing at the midpoint or higher followed by strong aftermarket performance to have a hope of opening up the market wider for other new deals. However, even a very succ

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Global Bank to Reattempt Covered Bond

Panama’s Global Bank is heard starting investor calls for a covered bond offering as it targets a $200m sale as soon as Thursday, with the tenor still to be determined. The sale, a revival of a previous attempt in May, would be the first issue of a covered bond in Latin America. The transaction is being led by Deutsche Bank and HSBC. Backed by a cover pool of residential mortgages denominated in USD and located in Panama, the sale received a Baa3/BBB minus rating, above Global Bank’s Ba1/BB+ default rating. In May, the lender had been looking at a $200m 5-year bond at a 5.00-5.25% yield.

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Petrobras Returns to Europe

Petrobras has raised more than $3.3bn-equivalent during its second visit to the European and Sterling bond markets. Diversifying funding sources away from USD as it addresses $235bn in capex needs, the Brazilian state-controlled oil producer was seen pricing at levels for the most part competitive to its EUR, GBP and dollar curves. A EUR1.3bn ($1.68bn) 2019 tranche priced at 99.398 with a 3.250% coupon to yield 3.357%, or mid-swaps plus 212.5bp, the tight end of 215bp (+/- 2.5bp) guidance. A EUR700m 2023 tranche priced at 98.154 with a 4.250% coupon to yield 4.466%, or mid-swaps plus 257.5bp, the tight end of 260bp (+/- 2.5bp) guidance. In the sterling market, Petrobras priced a GBP450m ($730m) 2029 bond at 97.472 with a 5.375% coupon to yield 5.610%, or Gilts+320bp, the tight end of 320bp-330bp guidance. Bankers on the deal calculated flat to five basis points concession for all three tranches to their repective curves. “Petrobras’ Euro 10-year looked roughly flat to their USD curve before swap charges – so a solid outcome in terms of relative pricing versus USD and diversification of funding,” notes a LatAm DCM banker away from the deal. While seen as tight to the EUR and GBP curves, there was less consensus on attractiveness versus the USD. “Petrobras got great pricing versus Euros and Sterling and would like to have priced flatter to the dollar curve given the basis swap relationship. But the outcome was still very successful,” says another banker. “The deal is fair and not cheap enough to encourage dollar-based investors to make a switch for a handful of basis points because of the lack of liquidity of EUR and GBP,” says a London-based portfolio manager following the deal. Demand was heard to be roughly EUR3.8bn for the 2019, EUR2.4bn for the 2013 and more than GBP900m for the Sterling portion. Bankers note the issuer is keen not to saturate the dollar market, and transaction took advantage of European investors hungry for Euro-denominated fixed-income transact

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