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American Electrical Supplier Makes Peru Buy

Anixter International has purchased Peruvian electrical wire and cable distributor Jorvex, it says, for $56.2m and the assumption of $10.5m in debt. The final price to be paid by the Chicago-based distributor of communication and security products, may also be subject to a net asset adjustment. Annual sales for Jorvex were approximately $115m in 2011, and Anixter expects the acquisition to be immediately accretive to earnings in the second half of 2012. Anixter is already active in Peru and several other Latin American markets. Anixter did not use an advisor, according to a spokesman.

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Modelo Deal Pushes Americans to M&A Lead

The $20.1 billion sale of 50% of Grupo Modelo agreed June 29 shook up the regional M&A league tables, placing JPMorgan and Bank of America Merrill Lynch at the top, according to Dealogic. Though BAML led at the midyear point, the numbers through Friday had JPMorgan at the top with $39.5bn volume through 23 deals, just ahead of BAML’s $38.0bn from 13. Lazard, also on the Modelo deal, stood third with $31.6bn from 13. Prior to the Modelo transaction, the largest deal in EM in 1H 2012 and sixth-largest ever in EM, Itau’s $22.1bn volume led the region. Modelo also pushed regional 1H volume to $133.5bn through Friday, ahead of the $74.5bn done in the corresponding period last year. Despite the AB InBev’s purchase of the remainder of the Mexican brewer representing more foreign entry to LatAm, European divestures should continue to drive the M&A market in the rest of the year, bankers say. “We have barely hit the surface of the available divestitures in the region,” notes a New York-based banker, noting that those foreigners who can will still opt to spend more in the region. M&A Fees in LatAm paint a different picture than the volume totals, with BTG Pactual leading the league tables with $62m through Friday, or 47% of the pool. Credit Suisse is second with $34m (30%), and Itau third with $26m (37%). EM-targeted M&A volume reached $377.2bn in 1H 2012, down 4% from 1H 2011, Dealogic says. However, EM?s share of global M&A rose to 30%, the highest share since 2H 2010.

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BTG Unloads Oil Stake

BTG Pactual has sold its stake in E&P operator STR Projetos e Participacoes, a holding company with assets in the oil and gas industry, for BRL700m ($345m). The sale was done through a public auction on the Bovespa. BTG’s private equity arm controlled the STR stake via its Stigma Participacoes vehicle.

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Edenred Adds in Brazil

Edenred has expanded in Brazil through the acquisition of food voucher issuer Comprocard, it says. The French corporate services provider is spending EUR24m ($30m) on the Brazilian, as it continues to target growth in the emerging markets. Comprocard issues around EUR100m in volume annually. Edenred has operated in Brazil since 1976, and is also present in Argentina, Chile, Mexico, Peru, Uruguay and Venezuela.

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Publicis Swallows Brazilian Ad Agency

Publicis Groupe has taken control of Neogama, a Brazilian advertizing firm, as part of a larger deal for a British player. The French communications group has agreed to acquire 66% of Neogama shares from founder Alexandre Gama and his partners, and will receive 34% through an agreement to acquire control of UK-based Bartle Bogle Hegarty (BBH). It does not disclose the value of the purchase, and a spokeswoman declines to comment. Neogama, which booked EUR42m ($52m) in revenue in 2011 and has been working in partnership with BBH since 2002, will keep its name. KPMG advised Publicis, while Estater advised Neogama.

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Mapfre Takes All of CentAm Holdco

Spain’s mapfre has agreed to buy the 35% that it doesn’t own in the holdco for its Central American business from Panama’s Grupo Mundial, it says. Mapfre Mundial, as the holdco is known, contains the insurer’s operations in Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua and Panama. It does not disclose the value of the transaction, and does not respond to requests for comment. Mapfre bought the initial 65% from Mundial in 2009.

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Cielo Expands with US Buy

Cielo has agreed to buy US payment processor Merchant e-Solutions (MeS) for $670m, it says. The Brazilian credit card payment processor was particularly drawn to MeS’s payment platform technology and its potential use in Brazil, rather than to the international expansion. The move offers Cielo diversification and better defense against increasing competition in Brazil’s credit card payment sector, which will remain its major focus. The deal was seen at a multiple of 11x Ebitda, according to remarks from Cielo’s CEO cited in local news and wire reports, and Cielo does not expect to put money into growing MeS in the US. MeS processes more than $14bn per year in transactions, with more than 250 financial institution clients, taking in $124m in revenue for the 12-month period through May 31. The transaction is being financed through Cielo’s own cash generation and prepayment of receivables from issuers, according to a spokesman. Goldman Sachs advised Cielo, and JPMorgan advised MeS.

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German Exits Chilean Highway Position

German construction company Hochtief has sold its 45.45% its stake in the Vespucio Norte Express toll road operator in Chile to a consortium led by Canada’s Brookfield for EUR230m ($276m), it says. The sale raises the Brookfield consortium’s position up from the 50% it bought last year from Spain’s ACS, as part of a EUR261m deal that also included a stake in the San Cristobal tunnel. Hochtief and its original partners received the build, operate and transfer contract in 2001, and have been operating the road since 2006. Closing is expected by year-end. Lazard advised Hochtief, and a Brookfield spokesman does not return a request for comment.

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Petrobras Takes All of Texas Refinery

Petrobras has agreed to pay $820.5m to acquire the 50% that it doesn’t already own in Pasadena Refining Systems, it says, ending a prolonged legal dispute with former partner Transcor Astra over the US asset. In the deal, Petrobras pays Belgium’s Astra, controller of Astra Oil Trading, the value of a put option set in 2009. The option was the subject of a lengthy arbitration process between the two parties, which has now been resolved with the agreement. Petrobras acquired its original 50% stake in the Pasadena, Texas-based refinery in 2006 for $360m.

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