If Latin America is to meet its demand for infrastructure, it must invest at least $250 billion annually over the coming years – double the amount of the last decade. This can only be done through multilateral cooperation
Category: 2013 September / October
Infrastructure finance Closing the gap
If Latin America is to meet its demand for infrastructure, it must invest at least $250 billion annually over the coming years – double the amount of the last decade. This can only be done through multilateral cooperation. By Enrique García
William Rhodes: A cautionary tale
Having emerged from the global financial crisis relatively unscathed, Latin America must remember that hubris never pays, says veteran banker William Rhodes
Mergers & acquisitions: One good turn
The growing ability of Latin corporates to buy, sell and merge with one another has paved the way for a new class of global champions – unthinkable a quarter century ago. By Ben Miller
Agustín Carstens: Strength in numbers
The next global shock may be coming. But Latin America is better placed than ever to withstand it, says Mexico’s central bank governor Agustín Carstens
Investment outlook When the dust settles
Country differentiation will prove key for investors navigating Latin America’s darkening economic landscape. By Nouriel Roubini
M&A deal of the quarter century: CVRD-Inco
$18.68bn acquisition, 2006 Vale’s $18.68 billion acquisition of Canada’s Inco in 2006 was, until 2013, the largest M&A deal involving a Latin American entity; it was also the first solid […]
Álvaro Uribe: War and peace
Hard-won security improvements in Colombia are at risk of being undone, says former president Álvaro Uribe
Jorge Errázuriz: The birth of a market
The growth of private pension funds in Latin America has been the single most significant development for the region’s capital markets, says Celfin Captial founder Jorge Errázuriz
Privatization deal of the quarter century: Telecomunicações Brasileiras
$19bn break-up and sale, 1998 In the 1980s and 1990s, privatizations markedly reshaped Latin America’s corporate landscape. Not all of them were happy, however. In some cases deeply indebted sovereigns […]
