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Posadas to Buy Back $189.2m Bonds

Grupo Posadas announced plans to buy back $189.2m in 8.75% of 2011 bonds, following the closing of a tender offer. The total represents 84% of the $225m outstanding. The hotel operator is paying $1,050 per $1,000 in an offer launched March 17, with Credit Suisse as dealer manager. Posadas is funding most of the transaction with proceeds from MXP1.5bn in 2013 floating-rate bonds it sold last week, also via Credit Suisse.

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Mato Expands I-Bank Role at HSBC

Gerardo Mato, HSBC’s LatAm DCM veteran, has expanded his reach at the UK bank. Mato and Tom Cole were recently named co-heads of global banking, Americas. They report locally to Paul Lawrence, head of global banking and markets, Americas and functionally to Robin Phillips, head of global banking, according to an internal memo. Mato also retains his role and title as head of global capital markets-Americas. The shop is billing the move as a “further step in HSBC’s execution of its emerging markets-led and financing-focused strategy.”

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IDB Approves $20m for Banco Ficohsa

The IDB has approved a $20m senior A/B loan for Honduras’ Banco Ficohsa to support the expansion of housing loans and credit for SMEs. It is part of a $25m medium to long-term credit facility, with a $5m MIF subordinated loan expected to be approved shortly. “The new loans will help Ficohsa to expand its mortgage portfolio and issue more loans to small and medium-sized businesses,” says the IDB. “It will also help to diversity Ficohsa’s funding sources and extend the terms of its debt obligations.” Ficohsa is the third largest bank in Honduras in terms of assets. In December 2007 it had $1.1bn in assets and $780m in deposits, says the IDB.

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Donald Terry to Leave MIF

Donald Terry, the head of the IDB’s Multilateral Investment Fund (MIF), is retiring July 1. He is 62 June 20, and therefore eligible for retirement. Terry is well known for his work on remittances and this week warned that the Mexican economy could be severely impacted if flows from abroad, currently flat, start to drop. A fall 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 and the appreciation of the BRL. Terry tells LatinFinance he is talking to the World Bank and other organizations about continuing his career, in Africa.

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LatAm Party Coming to a Close: BCP

The party may soon be over for LatAm as the eventual onset of the commodity bust coincides with the start of the election cycle, says BCP Securities in a note from the IDB meetings. The shop notes “a strange disconnect” at the Miami meetings, characterized by rampant optimism of Latin Americans versus a somber mood from North Americans and Europeans. “Many institutional clients were forced to skip the meetings, due to budget cuts and reduced travel allowances. The venues lacked the flair of previous years, when no cost was spared on entertainment and glitz. Moreover, many discussions focused on the depth of the global financial crisis, and the implications it had for the southern latitudes,” says BCP. “As much as the Latins tried to revive the party atmosphere, there was a sense that it was all over.”

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Microfinance Offers Haven for Investors

Microfinance is a stable, low risk business that offers a haven in volatile times, according to Helen Alexander, manager at ProCredit Holdings, a German company that controls several microfinance institutions in LatAm. “Microfinance has very low risk; very low default rates,” says Alexander. Stability in the sector will continue, Alexander says, even through the current markets crisis. Local and foreign capital markets for debt could find opportunities for participating in refinancing of microfinance, Alexander says, adding that transactions bring good returns with the added value of a social benefit. Alexander was a panelist in a seminar at IDB meetings in Miami that reviewed techniques, methodologies and technologies for the microfinance sector in LatAm.

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IDB Loan To Support Paraguay Long Term Finance (1)

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.

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Drop in Remittances Could Hurt Mexico (1)

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.

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