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GBM Clinches Infrastructure CCD

Grupo Bursatil Mexicano (GBM) has closed on a MXP750m ($57m) certificado de capital de desarrollo (CCD) transaction, representing the first close of a fund targeting MXP3.75bn, it says. The remaining 80% is to be funded through capital calls. The brokerage operator and fund manager’s 10-year deal will target investment in communications, water, transportation, oil, power and renewable energy projects. Investors are to receive their initial investment plus up to a 10% preferred return, with additional proceeds being divided 80% to investors and 20% to GBM. GBM has a track record of private infrastructure investments in Mexican companies including Grupo Mexico, TMM and Pinfra, and counts former SCT undersecretary Manuel Rodriguez as the general manager of the fund. GBM’s brokerage unit managed the sale.

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Celulose Irani Cancels Follow-On

Celulose Irani, the maker of paper, packaging and resins, has withdrawn its plans to raise funds through an equity follow-on due to market conditions, it says. The Brazilian company had plans to sell both primary and secondary units in a sale that was seen almost as an IPO, given the relative illiquidity of the outstanding shares. Itau and Credit Suisse were managing.

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ECM Expectations Mild

Equity capital market volumes have undershot 2011’s disappointing numbers so far this year, but bankers are holding out for a September pickup with a number of transactions in the pipeline. Total issuance plummeted 45% year on year through the end of July. But Daniel Darahem, head of LatAm ECM at JPMorgan, tells LatinFinance that despite this: “If market conditions allow it, we expect a strong pipeline of multi-billion dollar transactions for the second half.” Issuers are already lining up, most notably Santander Mexico’s $2bn-$4bn IPO. Cemex could follow with the carve-out of its ex-Mexico LatAm assets, a deal seen raising as much as $1bn.
Bankers say a large, oversubscribed deal that went on to trade well – ideally helped by a more supportive global environment – would help turn the tide for the market. “There should be a pickup in the second half for equity. It won’t be as bad year-end as it is now,” says Alberto Pandolfi, head of LatAm M&A at Citi, tells LatinFinance. “The Andean region is very attractive. In Peru there isn’t a single stock to play the consumer sector – it just doesn’t exist. There will have to be companies taking advantage of this to finance themselves. There is going to be huge appetite for this, and in Colombia too,” he adds. Through August 24, regional volume stood at $11.74bn from 48 deals, according to Dealogic, compared $25.43bn from 63 in the corresponding period in 2011. BTG Pactual leads with $1.36bn from 13 deals, followed by Citi ($1.08bn from 6) and JPMorgan ($1.02bn from 6). BTG earned the most, $26m, or 11.2% of the pool. “It’s been the most challenging year we’ve had in five years. These companies will need capital. It’s a matter of when. Markets don’t stay closed forever and at some stage you will have windows,” says a Sao Paulo-based banker.

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Mexichem Seeks Equity, Debt Sale

Mexican industrial conglomerate Mexichem has taken initial steps in a financing plan that would consist of $2bn in equity and debt, the company says, as it seeks to refinance existing debt and address working capital. It aims to raise $1bn via a capital increase and a separate $1bn portion in USD long-term debt. Pending National Banking and Securities Commission (CNBV) and Mexican Stock Exchange (BMV) approval, Mexichem would pursue a primary public offering among investors in Mexico, with distribution in other markets abroad, while the debt portion would be issued in the international bond market. “The company will call an extraordinary general shareholders’ meeting where the corresponding capital increase shall be proposed, as shall the suggestions that it be made through a public offer. Should it be approved, the existing shareholders will not have a preemptive right,” it says. The proposed deals are subject to various approvals and suitable market conditions.

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Equity Books Inflows

LatAm equity funds saw net inflows of $53m and EM equity funds saw net inflows of $324m during the week ended August 22, according to EPFR. In terms of performance, LatAm funds lost 1.67% during the week ended August 23, and are up 3.02% year-to-date, according to Lipper. EM funds fell 0.46% during the week, to bring them to a ytd gain of 7.83%. Global small and mid-cap funds fell 0.18% on the week, and have earned 9.40% ytd.

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IB Fee Pool Seen Stable: Bankers

Investment banking revenue is down from one year ago, but not so much that catching 2011’s total fee haul is impossible. With fees charged for deals relatively stable from last year, bankers say volumes will be more of a driver for their revenue than anything, and diversification away from Brazil is becoming more and more important. A strong September and October in DCM and ECM would help the picture the most. “The only fee base that came down [this year] was ECM,” Guilherme Paes, head of investment banking at BTG Pactual, tells LatinFinance. DCM fees are the same, he says, and M&A fees are stable and still attractive. At $1.04bn through August 24, the regional revenue total from M&A, loans, ECM and DCM is down versus the $1.38bn in corresponding period in 2011, according to Dealogic. BTG led the overall league tables in the region through August 24, with $114m, or 10.9% of the total pool. The bank was also at the top of the M&A table, with $75m, and the ECM table, with $26m. In ECM, fees have been affected by a greater number of banks per transaction, as well as many deals not resulting in full fees due to lower-than-expected pricing. In lean times, local markets can also help. “DCM and M&A markets continue to be much better than last year due to the fees coming from local markets. The local markets are very strong, and always open,” Paes says. Issuance and M&A activity, and the accompanying revenues, should still be dictated by global economic conditions, and news from the US and Europe. While Brazil still accounts for most of the region’s business, bankers stress the need to diversify revenue streams away from Brazil and into growing markets including Peru, Chile, Colombia and Mexico. “The revenue base is more affected by Brazil. LatAm ex-Brazil is probably flat, but given the size of Brazil, the overall level is down,” Javier Vargas, Co-Head of Investment Banking for Latin America at Credit Suisse, tells LatinFinance. “Investors are a bit more careful about Braz

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