Multilateral bank CAF says it has approved loans for Brazilian electric company Eletrobras, Argentina’s railway system and Panama’s capital. Eletrobras will obtain a total of $500m in the form of an A/B loan. Of that amount, CAF will provide $125m, while the remaining $375m will be a syndicated loan from BBVA, Santander and HSBC. Argentina, meanwhile will get $326m, all from CAF, to improve railroad connections between the northern part of the country and the ports. Lastly, Panama’s capital city will get $120m from CAF to improve the sewage system. Terms for the loans are not disclosed.
Category: Loans
BNDES Gives Loan To CPFL Energia
Brazil’s BNDES will give CPFL Energia a loan for BRL574m, though the development bank does not disclose the tenor. It will be used to build 7 wind farms in the state of Rio Grande do Norte, in the North-East of Brazil, which will generate a total of 188MW of power. The financing will also cover transmission. The loan represents a 71.6% share of the project, with the total value of the project being BRL801.8m, says the bank. It is estimated that the project will generate 1,500 direct and 4,500 indirect jobs, which will help to stimulate economic development in the region. “We are investing in wind power as it complements the hydro electric power we are already investing in, and will help to compensate for when reservoirs are not totally full,” says a spokesperson.
Brazil’s OSX Gets $420m loan
OSX Brasil has received an 8.5 year $420m syndicated loan at 425bp over Libor, according to a regulatory filing. The loan will go towards the purchasing and customizing of OSX-1 drill ship, it adds. The transaction was led by Norway’s DVB Bank, with Credit Agricole, Eksportfinans, GIEK, ING Bank, Santander and ABN AMRO also participating, says the borrower. OSX is privately owned and constructs, assembles and repairs floating units and vessels for oil and gas exploration in Brazil.
HydroChile Seeks Financing
HydroChile is looking for a $120m 14 year club, through Banco Espirito Santo, to help fund a $220m project. Credit Agricole, BES and WestLB are MLAs on the deal. HydroChile was founded in 2007 and develops run-of-river hydroelectric power projects with capacities ranging from 10MW to 50MW.
Jamaica Snags IDB Loan
The IDB says it is providing the Jamaican government’s Education Transformation Process with a $60m loan program and expects to provide an additional $30m in 2012. Proceeds will be used to improve education on the island. Terms were not disclosed.
Baja Mining Signs $858m Facility
Canada-based Baja Mining Corp has signed a $858m financing facility to develop and construct its 70% owned Bolea project in Mexico. The financing is made up of a $823m project financing debt facility and $35m in equity. The latter comes from Louis Dreyfus Commodities in the form of a letter of credit. The US eximbank, Export Development Canada, Korea Development Bank and a group of commercial banks participated. The US eximbank provided $419m, EDC $150m, KDB $90m and commercial lenders $100m for project financing. KDB provided $64m in subordinated debt. Commercial banks involved are Barclays, Standard Chartered, Standard Bank, Unicredit and WestLB. “Closing of the facility means full-scale construction at Boleo can commence imminently,” says John Greenslade, president and CEO of Baja Mining. The Boleo copper- cobalt-zinc-manganese-project is targeted for copper commissioning in 2012 and has a minimum scheduled mine life of 25 years. The remaining 30% is owned a Korean syndicate of industrial companies. Company officials were not available to comment on pricing.
El Salvador Gets IDB Support
The IDB has approved a $200m loan to help strengthen El Salvador’s fiscal sector. The loan is part of a package of 6 operations approved by the IDB for El Salvador this year, totaling around $450m. The 20-year loan has been structured in 2 tranches, each with a grace period of 5 years, and an interest rate based on Libor.
Fibria Talks Liability Management
Brazil’s Fibria is taking advantage of low interest rates in different product areas to meet de-leveraging goals. The pulp and paper producer has raised $1.75bn in the bond market and $1.9bn in the syndicated loan market in the past 12 months, and will continue to add to the mix as it pursues the debt improvement plan it started following its birth from the merger of VCP and Aracruz. “We won’t stop – we will always be challenging our creditors with different instruments,” Joao Elek, director of finance, investor relations and risk management tells LatinFinance. “If we can get a discount from one facility, we immediately start talking to the other lenders to reduce the costs of another,” the former executive at cable provider NET says. Fibria has cut the average costs of funds on dollar debt to about 6.0%, from 7.1% at the time of the merger, and aims to take that level lower. It has BRL10.8bn in net debt and BRL13.2bn total debt, with an average maturity of 5.8 years, he says. Elek declines to disclose any specific plans for its next borrowing, though he notes that the bond markets remain attractive. “The low interest rate environment should prevail for longer than was expected 2 years ago,” he says, though he notes it is important for issuers to take advantage of the low-cost windows when they see them. Different pockets of liquidity are opening and closing all the time, he says, noting increasing demand from investors in Europe and Asia. At the time of Fibria’s last issue the demand was still majority US and Europe, he says. Bilateral debt can be similar in cost to the bond market at the moment, he explains, though bonds offer larger amounts and longer tenors. Fibria also makes use of pre-export financing, he says, and has negotiated to lower the average costs in this product area to about Libor plus 2.8% now, from Libor plus 4.0%-4.5% at the time of the merger. Fibria raised $1.18bn in a 2-tranche pre-export facility in December. It does not anticipate new equity
JPMorgan Heard Appointing Loan Expert
Rodrigo Gracia will be joining JP Morgan’s syndicated loans team, say people with knowledge of the situation. He was heard to have recently quit as vice president at Credit Agricole’s syndicated loans group after 6 years at the bank. Gracia has previously worked at JPMorgan, from July 2000 to December 2001in the syndicated finance division, where he was involved in structuring and executing syndicated loan transactions in the US and LatAm. He has also worked at Dresdner Kleinwort Wasserstein and Serfin in Mexico. JPMorgan has been without a head of LatAm loan syndications since it made Ricardo Rubio redundant in late 2008 as part of a 10% reduction in global headcount, focused on investment banking and including other senior debt bankers. The bank has long been expected to replace Rubio to support an active DCM, ECM and M&A franchise. However, it is understood to have covered LatAm from its US loan desk over the last few years, given the very low level of activity in regional syndications. A JPMorgan spokeswoman declines to comment and Gracia does not return calls.
BAML Defines LatAm Fee Opportunity
LatAm is an essential part of the business for Bank of America Merrill Lynch (BAML), according to Andrea Orcel, executive chairman of global banking and markets and president of EM ex-Asia. And investment banking represents just 5% of the potential fee pool. “The emerging markets are an enormous and critical opportunity,” Orcel tells LatinFinance in an exclusive interview. “Latin America is obviously a key component of our global emerging markets strategy.” Orcel estimates a fee pool of around $70bn in LatAm and CEEMEA across banking, global markets and wealth management. About $30bn of that is anticipated from LatAm, taking into account less glamorous areas like trade and export finance, leasing, treasury services and cash management, which pay well when done in bulk. “That includes all businesses: corporate banking, sales and trading, investment banking and wealth management,” says Orcel. “According to Dealogic, the investment banking fee pool for Latin America was about $1.5bn in 2009. We had a high single digit market share of that and we believe we are on target to achieving double-digit share in the future,” he adds. Orcel says LatAm will be a significant contributor to global revenue across all products, but declines to put a number on it. “Latin American investment banking revenues have soared in the past year and are expected to be up 70% by year end, versus 2009,” says Orcel. Globally, BAML earned $3.1bn in Q2, from $29.5bn in revenue. Investment banking income was $1.3bn in the quarter, which BAML does not break out by region.
