The $488m financing has closed for the Brazilian deepwater oil drilling rig sponsored by Delba and Interoil. WestLB arranged the transaction, which featured a $100m commitment from the IDB in the form of an A/B loan. Pricing on the $460m 10.5-year project loan and $12m working capital facility starts at 237.5bp over Libor, stepping up to 250bp at completion. A $12m short-term facility pays 125bp. Participants Dexia, DVB, KfW, Depfa, Itau BBA, Natixis, Cifi, Caterpillar Financial and Nordkap took tickets of $10-$60m, having been pared down from $75m commitments. The $130m in financial equity was placed with German Private Equity Firm MPC Capital.
Category: Bonds
Energisa Plots Debenture Sale
Brazilian power distributor Energisa plans to issue BRL150m in 2016 debentures. The price was not specified, as the sale still must be approved by the CVM. Energisa controls electricity distribution companies Energipe, Companhia Energetica da Borborema and Saelpa.
Venezuela Gets More CAF Support for Hydro
Venezuela will receive a $600m loan from CAF to finance the Tocoma hydroelectric project, the CAF said. The proceeds will fund a portion of the $3bn power generation project developed by state utility CVG Edelca on the Caroni river in the southern Venezuela. The deal marks CAF’s second loan for the 2.1 gigawatt project after $300m lent in 2004. The government hopes the project, to be complete in 2014, will increase the country’s generation by 15%.
IDB Approves $300m Argentina Loan
The IDB has approved a $300m 15-year conditional credit line to the Argentine National Agrifood Health and Quality Service for investment projects. A first $100m loan from the facility, guaranteed by the Argentine Government, is for a 25-year term with a 5-year grace period. It follows an IDB strategy agreed with Argentine authorities to promote competitiveness in agricultural development policy. Local counterpart funds for the loan total $43m. The deal will strengthen and expand the country’s capacity to protect and improve agricultural, agrifood and fisheries health and quality.
Gerdau to Repurchase up to BRL50m in Shares
Gerdau plans to buy back up to 1m preferred shares in the coming 30 days, the company said Tuesday in a filing with the CVM. Based on the BRL49.55 closing price of the company’s Bovespa-traded preferred shares, that could yield a total buyback of close to BRL50m. The sum represents a fraction of the 296m outstanding preferred shares. The deal will be funded with cash on hand and the shares will be held in Gerdau’s treasury to be used for an incentive-based compensation program. Bradesco, Itau and Unibanco are slated to handle the process.
Mexico Extends Curve With 2040
Mexico shook the DCM markets awake Tuesday and extended its yield curve out to 2040 with a new benchmark. The $1.5bn 2040 bond priced at 99.930 with a 6.050% coupon to yield 6.055%, or 170bp over UST, the bottom of 170bp-175bp guidance. The order book reached $3bn, say bankers on the Baa1/BBB+ transaction, and it was upsized from $1bn. One banker close to the deal notes that it came just 5bp wide of a $4bn 30-year GE Capital priced the same day at 165bp over UST. However, those away from the issue found the transaction to be slightly cheap, suggesting that Mexico was paying a premium of a few basis points to reopen the market for LatAm in the prevailing hostile external market conditions. “Figuring out the premium for a relatively rare issuer like UMS is not easy,” Mexico’s head of public credit, Gerardo Rodriguez, tells LatinFinance. He adds that after discussions with investors, Mexico priced using as a reference the UMS ’34, which at the time was trading at 130bp-154bp. “We upsized to $1.5bn and still kept to the low end of guidance,” adds Rodriguez. Proceeds refinance debt, of which the sovereign has about $3.2bn coming due this year. The sale was managed by Credit Suisse and Deutsche Bank.
Sleepy DCM Awaits Usiminas Issue (1)
It’s shaping up to be a slower first half of January than usual in LatAm DCM, with uncertainty about external conditions keeping issuance volume well below last January’s seasonally brisk spree. High-yield issuers appear to be waiting to see what pricing Brazilian steelmaker Usiminas is able to get on a $400m 2018 notes issue. The Baa3/ BBB- deal is now roadshowing, taking in Los Angeles, New York, Boston and London, with pricing expected as soon as Friday. Bankers away from the transaction, led by JPMorgan and UBS expect a yield in the low 7% area, owed to the issuer’s strong name and low outstanding debt. If the market opens up, other high-grade frequent issuers could follow, notes one banker, while the high-yield deals yanked late last year may continue to wait. Sovereigns are in no hurry, the banker adds.
Sleepy DCM Awaits Usiminas Issue
It’s shaping up to be a slower first half of January than usual in LatAm DCM, with uncertainty about external conditions keeping issuance volume well below last January’s seasonally brisk spree. High-yield issuers appear to be waiting to see what pricing Brazilian steelmaker Usiminas is able to get on a $400m 2018 notes issue. The Baa3/ BBB- deal is now roadshowing, taking in Los Angeles, New York, Boston and London, with pricing expected as soon as Friday. Bankers away from the transaction, led by JPMorgan and UBS expect a yield in the low 7% area, owed to the issuer’s strong name and low outstanding debt. If the market opens up, other high-grade frequent issuers could follow, notes one banker, while the high-yield deals yanked late last year may continue to wait. Sovereigns are in no hurry, the banker adds.
Usiminas Preps $400m Bond Sale
Brazilian steelmaker Usiminas is taking the opening crack at LatAm cross-border DCM, which is otherwise dead as bankers slowly get back to work amid tricky market conditions. A roadshow starts today for the sale of up to $400m in 2018 144A/Reg S bonds. The exact sale date remains to be set. The high-grade issuer has said it plans to raise at least $3bn over the next two years to fund basic capital expenditures and manage the balance sheet. The Baa3/ BBB- deal is led by UBS and JPMorgan.
Dresdner Shutting Down New York DCM
Dresdner Kleinwort is effectively closing down its New York-based DCM business, save for a few sales and trading people. It is shifting resources closer to local markets, according to executives formerly with the firm. The change appears to reflect an internal decision to exit unprofitable businesses around the globe – including the US bond business – and reduce headcount in DCM. The German bank is heard to have pared down its eight person LatAm DCM team to four through layoffs. The remainder in New York will join local bankers and the practice for the entire region will be run out of Sao Paulo, according to people familiar with the matter. Carlos Rosso, a DCM originator based in Mexico, and Glenn Peebles, in charge of Brazil origination, will both continue at their posts, with the latter expected to preside over a Dresdner expansion in Brazil. DCM veteran Enrique Bustamante, head of LatAm corporate finance based in New York, was laid off. Rodrigo Gonzalez, a DCM originator also based in New York, is heard still with the team and may move to Sao Paulo. In August, Dresdner set up a LatAm M&A practice in Sao Paulo, with Gabriel Nores running the advisory effort and Eduardo Bertao, a Brazilian formerly based in London, focusing on the utilities sector. A Dresdner spokeswoman declined to comment.
