Luis Pena, CEO of Mexico’s Grupo Financiero Banorte, resigned from his position, the bank said Monday. Banorte did not give a reason for the resignation. Pena joined the institution, one of Mexico’s last big banks owned by local investors, as chief executive in 2004, and has overseen a period of expansion in Mexico and the US. Alejandro Valenzuela, head of treasury and capital markets, has been named interim CEO. Banorte gave no details regarding permanent plans for replacing Pena.
Category: People
Pactual Sale Gains Big Adherent
A rumored initiative to have UBS sell its Pactual investment banking unit just got a significant boost from an unexpected party. On Thursday, Luqman Arnold, a former CEO of UBS ousted in 2001 and whose fund today owns a $450m stake in the bank, sent UBS top brass a letter calling for major changes at the firm, including a sale of Pactual. Separate from Arnold’s public proposal, an internal movement headed by former partners of Pactual to buy back the shop is rumored to have been underway for months. And Andre Esteves, the former CEO of Pactual who was elevated to head UBS’ fixed income and currencies division out of London, was also heard to have proposed a Pactual buyback to the Swiss bank’s top managers – a surprising move given the fact that he spearheaded the sale in 2006. Local bankers away from UBS say he was joined by Jorge Paulo Lemann, the billionaire founder of GP Investments, in an offer for the shop he ran for years in Rio. UBS denied Esteves is in talks to buy back Pactual and maintains it wants to keep the Brazil unit, which garnered significant profit in 2007.
Medina Mora Keeps LatAm After Citi Shuffle
Manuel Medina Mora will continue to lead Citi’s Mexico and Latin America operations following a comprehensive global reshuffle. According to Citi CEO Vikram Pandit, the reorganization will allow the bank to focus resources on growth in emerging and developed markets and improve efficiencies. “Citi has established a regional structure to bring decision-making closer to clients. It is empowering the leaders of the geographic regions with the authority to make decisions on the ground,” says the bank, which is under pressure after significant mortgage-related losses. Medina will report directly to Pandit, as will the heads of the following units: Asia Pacific, including Japan; Western Europe, Middle East and Africa; and Central and Eastern Europe. Citi has also reorganized its consumer group into two global businesses – consumer banking and global cards. It will also further centralize global functions, including finance, IT, legal, human resources, and branding.
PE Eyes New Brazil Low Cost Airline
David Neeleman, the founder and former CEO of US low-cost airline JetBlue and a Brazilian by birth, has garnered commitments from at least seven private equity shops for $150m in financing to start a new low-cost airline in Brazil, say executives close to the matter. Neeleman, who was ousted by JetBlue’s board last year, is set to receive a $70m installment this month and another $70m at the end of the second quarter from a group of private investors to start the operation, which still has no name. A consortium led by Connecticut-based Pequot Capital includes US firms Weston Presidio, Wexford Capital, Peterson Partners, Zweig Associates and Dimenna & Kadon. Brazil’s GIF Gestao is also investing in the venture. Neeleman has put in $10m of his own capital. The plan, say executives close to the process, is to use the equity to lease Embraer-made aircraft and set up the company, which will compete mainly against Gol with the low-cost model. The airline will be based in Sao Paulo and aims to commence operations in early 2009. It wants to serve most major markets in Brazil with as many as 76 brand-new Embraer aircraft by 2013.
Neeleman Airline Places Jumbo Jet Order
The private equity-backed low cost Brazil airline venture from David Neeleman, former CEO of JetBlue, has placed $1.4bn in firm orders for 36 Embraer E-195 jets and has options for another 20 and purchase rights for a further 20, which would bump the total spend up to $3bn. Routes, cities and timing for the as yet unnamed start up are still being worked out, says Gareth Edmonson-Jones, a spokesman for Neeleman. Hughes Hubbard & Reed advised Neeleman while Mayer Brown Rowe and Maw advised the private equity consortium. No investment banks were involved in the process. “Our target market is the 150 million passengers who travel annually by long distance bus as well as those who, for lack of a convenient alternative, don’t travel at all,” says Neeleman. “The Brazilian market is ready for a third major airline and that there is sufficient untapped potential to support all of us,” he adds. Neeleman pledges to make money with fewer passengers than his competitors.
Brazil’s Klabin Taps Poernbacher
Reinoldo Poernbacher has taken over as new CEO of Brazilian paper manufacturer Klabin. Poernbacher replaces Miguel Sampol, who announced his resignation last week. Poernbacher currently serves as managing director of Klabin’s forestry business unit and the supply chain division, according to the company’s website. He joined Klabin in 1994 and has occupied a number of positions as director in the business units of the company.
Usiminas Denies CEO Departure Rumors
An Usiminas official denied rumors that the company’s long-standing CEO Rinaldo Soares would be stepping down after a shareholder’s assembly in May. Contacted by LatinFinance, the official, who asked not to be named, dismissed the rumors as untrue, declining to comment further. A report in Brazilian paper Valor Wednesday speculates Soares will be replaced by Marco Antonio Castello Branco, an executive at the Brazilian subsidiary of French steelmaker Vallourec-Mannesmann.
Itau BBA Raids Deutsche Bank
Itau BBA has plundered Deutsche Bank’s Sao Paulo office, taking four senior executives including CEO of the Brazil business Alexandre Aoude, say people away from the process. Joao de Biase, head of corporate banking, Fabio Dall Acqua, a senior distribution executive and Pedro Nunes also left along with Aoude. Itau is apparently beefing up its fixed income sales and distribution business with the hires. A Deutsche spokesperson was not immediately available for comment.
ING Appoints Boyles for Americas
ING has appointed John Boyles as CEO of wholesale Americas and head of clients. He was previously ING’s head of structured finance, telecom and media finance and has been as the Dutch bank since 1996. He will report to Ralph Hamers, head of wholesale network and succeeds David Hudson.
D&S Denies Wal-Mart Talks
Chilean retail chain Distribucion y Servicios (D&S) has rejected reports that suggest it is holding merger talks with Wal-Mart. In a statement to the SVS, Chile’s regulator, D&S’s CEO Enrique Ostale Cambiaso says his company had not been in discussions with Wal-Mart, as local paper El Mercurio reported earlier in the day. An Itau report noted last month that the termination of talks between Falabella and D&S – thanks to an antitrust ruling – would pave the way for a resumption of other merger considerations in Chile’s highly competitive retail sector. “D&S may now look at La Polar and/or Ripley to increase exposure in non-food and credit,” said Itau in early February. “Conversely the possibility is now open for Wal-Mart, Casino or Carrefour to make a stab at D&S,” it adds.
