LatAm equity funds saw $74m in inflows for the week ended May 11, according to EPFR Global, amid the second week of inflows for Brazil equity funds. EM funds took in $268m during the week. Overall performance was negative for the week, as EM funds were down 0.21% for the week ended May 12, and 0.79%% ytd, according to Lipper. However, LatAm funds rose 1.19% for the week, but remain down 4.71% ytd. Meanwhile, global small and mid-cap funds are up 0.81% for the week and 5.75% ytd.
Category: Equity
Atlas CCD Plans Retap
Mexico’s Atlas Discovery Capital is preparing to reopen its Certificado de Capital de Desarrollo (CCD) to raise MXP650m, according to regulatory filings. The PE firm closed the original transaction in December 2009, raising MXP1.4bn. The 10-year fund created by the deal makes investments in a diverse variety of Mexican businesses, with a focus on middle-class consumption. Its activities to date include investments in airline Volaris and transportation company Lipu. The return structure is similar to other CCDs – investors recover the funds invested, then are paid an 8% preferred return, with remaining funds distributed 80% to investors and 20% to Atlas. It does not give a date for the reopening, to be managed by ING.
Mexican Lender Readies IPO
BanRegio, a Mexican bank focused on lending to small and medium-sized businesses, is planning an IPO according to a regulatory filing. Grupo Financiero, the holdco for BanRegio, plans to sell 86m primary shares while its controlling shareholders plan to offer 30m secondary shares. If a 15% greenshoe is exercised, the transaction would represent a 34% stake in the bank. BanRegio does not give the total expected size or the timing of the sale. It is raising funds to expand operations. Banamex and BBVA Bancomer have been hired to manage the sale. BanRegio had MXP53.5bn in total assets at year-end 2010, up 12.3% from 2009, it says. Corporate loans constitute 80% of its MXP24bn loan portfolio, with a stated focus on small and medium-sized businesses. Founded in Monterrey in 1949 by Manuel Santos Gonzalez as Banco Regional del Norte, it is present in 13 Mexican states in the North and Center of the country. With only Aeromexico going public so far this year, Mexican debutants are lining up hoping to top last year’s MXP18.08bn total from 4 deals. Fellow bank Credito Real is also expected to list for at least MXP3bn this year, through UBS, Morgan Stanley, BBVA and Ixe. Homebuilder Javer plans to raise some $300m equivalent, with Bank of America Merrill Lynch and Credit Suisse heard close to the mandate. Dairy Grupo Lala is heard picking JPMorgan and Morgan Stanley for its IPO team that should also include Mexican banks. Other Mexican companies in the IPO pipe include airline Volaris and theatre operator Cinepolis.
BR Malls Set for Share Sale
Brazilian developer BR Malls is set to price an equity follow-on today that could top BRL600m. As it seeks funds to continue expansion, the shopping mall operator will hope to capitalize on demand for Brazilian retail exposure. The issuer’s shares are trading down slightly since the April 29 announcement that the company would seek a follow-on, closing at BRL16.60 Monday. BR Malls had closed at BRL16.93 prior to the announcement. The 34m primary shares on offer would raise BRL649m at that level, assuming the exercise of a 15% greenshoe. A 20% hot issue is also available. Proceeds are marked for acquisitions, the company says. The deal was the third to use a legal change last year that allows issuers with a minimum BRL5bn market cap and 3 year history as a public company to file and launch a follow-on simultaneously, and is the first to do so without announcing its intentions beforehand. Bradesco, BTG Pactual, Goldman Sachs and Itau are managing the sale.
LatAm Equity Sees More Outflows
LatAm equity funds saw $149m in outflows for the week ended May 4, according to EPFR Global. Brazil equity funds posted outflows of $38m. Mexico funds also had outflows of $51m. Colombia and Peru both saw inflows of $9m and $18m, respectively. EM funds took in $1.2 billion during the week. Performance was negative for the week, as EM funds were down 3.78% for the week ended May 5, and 0.58%% ytd, according to Lipper. LatAm funds dropped 5.00% for the week, and are down 5.78% ytd. Meanwhile, global small and mid-cap funds are down 2.87% for the week but are up 4.88% ytd.
Brazilian Watchmaker Plans IPO
Brazilian watchmaker and distributor Technos has registered for an IPO, according to the CVM. It has not indicated the size or timing of the sale, but has indicated it plans to include both primary and secondary shares. Credit Suisse, Goldman Sachs and Itau are managing. Technos was founded in 1956, and recorded BRL59.1m in Ebitda in 2010, up from BRL45.1m in 2009, it says. Technos counts PE firm DLJ (40%) and Brazilian asset manager Dynamo (32%) among its ownership.
Petersen Buys 10% Stake in YPF
Grupo Petersen announced yesterday it would exercise its option to buy 10% of the capital of YPF for $1.3bn from Repsol. The deal had been expected since Petersen, controlled by the Argentinean Eskenazi family, acquired a 14.9% stake in the Argentinean oil and gas company in 2008 with the option to buy the additional 10%. Following the transaction, Repsol will hold 58.23% of YPF while Grupo Petersen will control 25.46%. Repsol says it plans to continue to bring international and Argentine minority investors into YPF.
Recalcine Misses Target, Trades Up
Chile’s Recalcine (CFR) missed its target on a CLP172.72bn ($368m) IPO, though it saw its shares end up more than 13% in the market. The acquisitive pharmaceutical company with a presence in 19 countries announced a price Thursday morning below the target minimum price it had set for Wednesday’s auction, raising less than the $400m-equivalent it had hoped for. It priced the 2.03bn shares at CLP85 per share, below the CLP90 floor it had wanted. A CLP90 price would have meant a CLP182.7bn ($390m) sale that would have been closer to the $400m expectation. However, the shares were in demand in their first session, closing Thursday at CLP96.36, up 13.4% from the issue price. Total demand on the Chile’s first IPO of the year reached CLP1.56trn ($3.40bn) from 4,518 orders, but orders at or above CLP90 were not sufficient and the issuer chose to price below, according to a Bolsa filing. About 24% of the sale was bought as ADS, and foreign investors buying local shares accounted for another 31% of the deal, according to the bolsa. Domestic pensions and insurance companies made up 21%, and 10% went to retail investors, with the remainder going to other investors. Analysts’ fair price estimates varied between CLP70-CLP100 prior to the sale. Most see it as an attractive investment given its strong presence in the region and capacity to expand in LatAm and other EM as the health sector reaches more people with rising incomes in these countries. CFR is raising funds for new acquisitions, as well as for refinancing debt and organic expansion. The sale includes 1.7bn primary shares, as well as 336m secondary shares sold by the controlling Weinstein family. LarrainVial, Jefferies and JPMorgan managed the sale, the first Chilean IPO since a CLP109bn sale from Camanchaca in November. Next up in Chile’s IPO market is fishery AquaChile, pricing an IPO May 19 targeting about $250m equivalent.
Recalcine Set for Bolsa Debut
Chilean pharmaceutical company Recalcine (CFR) is set to announce the price on its approximately $400m IPO this morning, following conclusion of the auction process yesterday. Analysts were estimating a CLP70-CLP100 fair price for the 2.1bn shares, which would indicate a CLP147bn-CLP210bn ($318m-$455m) deal. Bankers had estimated the deal would raise just above $400m. Analysts like CFR’s diversity, growth plan and the sector’s high barriers to entry for competitors. The pharmaceutical industry should see growth of 5%-8% in 2010-2014, according to Chilean brokerage Security, led mainly by EM growth. Security sees fair value for the shares at CLP82, with a CLP88 year-end target, and recommends buying at up to CLP70, it says. The pharmacy is offering 1.8bn primary shares, as well as 336m secondary shares to be sold by the controlling Weinstein family. Recalcine is raising funds for new acquisitions, as well as for refinancing debt and organic expansion. “The country mix should keep expanding if CFR keeps doing what it is doing now,” says Alex Sadzawka, analyst at Celfin, who declines to comment on his firm’s price recommendation. He sees particular opportunity in Southeast Asia. “There should be a drive for M&A, and there is space for organic growth in countries like Argentina, Peru and Colombia. There is lots of room to expand different business lines into other countries,” he adds. Recalcine is in 19 countries in Asia, the Americas and Europe, either through direct operations or joint ventures. Larrain Vial, Jefferies and JPMorgan are managing the sale, which represents about 24% of the company’s capital. The stock marks a relatively new angle for the local bourse, with only the less diverse generic drug specialist Andromaco represented from the pharmaceutical sector.
Suzano Readies Convertible Domestic Bond
Brazilian pulp and paper company Suzano Celulose e Papel is planning to sell BRL1.2bn in 2013 convertible bonds in a private sale, it says. The deal is divided into a BRL401.8m convertible into preferred shares, and a BRL798.2m tranche convertible into common shares. Both pay interest at ICPA+ 4.5%, and are convertible after 2 years at a rate of BRL17.39. Proceeds will fund construction on a new unit at its industrial plant in the state of Maranhao. An investor relations official explains the debentures are to be offered to controlling shareholders, with BNDES agreeing to guarantee to buy up to BRL572m of the remainder. Suzano is rated Aa1/A+ on a national scale.
