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Metalfrío Plans IPO

Metalfrío Solutions, a Brazilian fridge-freezer manufacturer, is to launch an IPO via Bovespa, the company said in a filing with the Stock Exchange. The company hopes to raise $281 million (580 million reais) from the sale of 20.7 million common shares at a price of between 24 reais and 28 reais per shares. Metalfrío will also offer shares to foreign investors under 144a rules. UBS is the lead.

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Gafisa Debuts In NY

Brazilian property developer and construction company Gafisa debuted on the New York Stock Exchange on Friday, adding its ADRs to those of the other 31 Brazilian firms already trading on the exchange. Meanwhile, the company fixed the price for its local share offering at 26 reais per share, below that of last year’s IPO when it achieved a rate of 33 reais per share. The company is hoping to raise over 1 billion reais ($478 million) by offering 39.7 million shares – 18.7 million shares via a primary offering and 20.9 million via a secondary offering. Merrill Lynch, Itaú BBA and Citi are coordinating. Gafisa launched its IPO on Bovespa last February, raising $433 million from the sale of 400 million shares.

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Aerolíneas Argentinas Prepares Listing

Argentina’s former flagship air carrier, Aerolíneas Argentinas, is planning to list on the Buenos Aires Stock Exchange by the end of this year, or beginning of next, reports local daily Ambito Financiero. According to the paper, the airline is planning to float up to 40% of its capital. The money raised will be used to upgrade infrastructure.

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Latin Assets on the Rebound

Latin American assets have retraced some of their losses, but strategists are split on whether this is more than just a dead-cat bounce. Wednesday saw Mexico’s Bolsa and Brazil’s Bovespa gaining 0.83% and 1.73% respectively, but they lost 5.8% and 6.6% the previous session, respectively. Merrill Lynch says the Tuesday dip was a short-term event that does not reflect a shift in investors’ positive view of EM fundamentals. JPMorgan agrees that the sell-off should not be likened to the broader May 2006 correction. Others such as Lehman take a more bearish view, saying the correction process could last up to a month as the markets digest adjustments in Chinese policy and the US subprime mortgage market, though in the medium term, it predicts that risk aversion will subside. WestLB’s Ricardo Amorim says that while there may be a correction underway, it presents a buying opportunity as LatAm assets are set to recover. CreditSights heralds a new market environment where investors will be more cautious, lenders more discriminating and companies more pessimistic. We expect cash that has been accumulating on the sidelines to be put to work on the dips.

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Isagen IPO Set For End-Feb

Colombia’s government will start to sell off its 20% stake in power generator Isagen via an IPO on February 28, reports Dow Jones. The government has set a minimum price per share of 1,130 pesos ($0.50) and is hoping to capture around $262 million from the sale. Last year, the company succeeded in swapping a large part of its US dollar debt for local-currency debt, thereby reducing its exposure to exchange-rate fluctuations. The government is hoping to emulate the path taken by state-controlled electricity distributor Interconexión Eléctrica SA (ISA), which was partially privatized in 2000 and which has become a key regional player in the sector, expanding into Panama, Peru, Ecuador, Bolivia and Brazil.

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