Volkswagen Leasing is expected to price Friday up to MXP4bn in 2012 domestic bonds, according to bankers on the deal. The mxAAA transaction is expected to feature fixed and floating-rate notes. Proceeds will support the lending portfolio of the financing arm of Volkswagen’s Mexico unit. HSBC and Santander are joint bookrunners.
Category: Mexico
Curtis Appoints ICSID Lawyer
Gabriela Alvarez-Avila has joined law firm Curtis, Mallet-Prevost, Colt & Mosle as counsel based in Mexico City. She was formerly senior counsel to the World Bank’s International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID). During 7 years at ICSID, she administered arbitration cases including claims based on bilateral investment treaties, NAFTA, CAFTA, national investment laws and international contracts.
Mexico’s Sigma Preps Local Bond Offering
Mexican food producer Sigma Alimentos is roadshowing a local bond issue worth up to MXP2bn. The subsidiary of Grupo Alfa plans to issue MXP1.5bn-MXP2bn mid-December, treasurer Reynaldo Garza tells LatinFinance. It will comprise a to-be-determined combination of 2014 fixed and 2012 floating-rate notes. “The Mexican market has been a bit tighter in the last few months, but there is still room in November and early December to obtain attractive financing,” he says. Proceeds will refinance short-term debt. Bank of America is managing the offer.
Mexican Peso Pipeline Swells to MXP20bn
A series of Mexican corporates and a municipality are lining up local bond issues that may bring over MXP20bn to market by year end. Cemex is planning to bring a two-tranched offering of certificados bursatiles next month via HSBC that could total MXP6bn. A fixed rate tranche and a floating rate one, each worth up to MXP3bn, are expected and both have received an mx.AA from S&P. Another MXP6bn offer is heard coming from beverage producer Femsa in the first week of December, say bankers on the deal. Santander and HSBC are running the offering, featuring a MXP3.5bn 2013 TIIE-based floating tranche and a MXP2.5bn 2017 UDI-linked piece. A MXP 4bn issue from Volkswagen Leasing via Santander and HSBC is also heard to be in the pipeline. Lastly, Mexico City’s government has registered to sell as much as MXP4.5bn in floating- and fixed-rate bonds via Deutsche Bank. It may sell the bonds in multiple offerings through the end of the year, with maturities of up to 30 years.
Mexico’s Coppel to Buy Credito y Casa
Coppel Capital, a unit of Mexican retail concern Coppel has agreed to buy Mexican Sofol Hipotecaria Credito y Casa, the target said in a filing. The price Coppel will pay for 100% of Credito y Casa’s shares wasn’t disclosed. The deal has already been approved by Mexico’s Federal Competition Commission. Coppel Capital plans to form a financial group by joining banking venture BanCoppel, pension unit Afore Coppel, and Hipotecaria Credito y Casa.
Mexican Investors Warm to Leverage
Meanwhile in Mexico, mutual funds and large private investor pools are developing an appetite for leveraged local currency bond deals, which could bode well for the numerous private equity firms scouting the domestic landscape for deals. “You can find financing for transactions today on better terms than you could a year ago,” says Miguel Valenzuela, of the Carlyle Group in Mexico. “In principle, our banks tell us there seems to be an appetite for deals with leverage levels of 2.5x-3.5x,” he adds. In the coming several months, investors that have warmed up to local Sofol issuances may find themselves being offered LBO paper from companies being bought by firms such as Southern Cross, GP Investments, Advent International and Carlyle.
Mexico’s CFE, Toyota Financial Services Price Local Bonds
Mexican state utility Comision Federal de Electricidad (CFE) has priced MXP1.2bn in local floating-rate 2017 bonds at 30bp over Cetes. Proceeds fund investments in various projects. The offering is rated Aaa.mx by Moody’s and managed by Deutsche Bank. Separately, Toyota Financial Services priced MXP1bn in 2012 local bonds with an 8.5% coupon to yield 48bp over Mexican treasuries. Demand for the AAA.mex offering led by Santander and HSBC surpassed MXP2bn, and it was allocated to Mexico-based institutional investors.
Atizapan de Zaragoza Gets Peso Loan
The municipality of Atizapan de Zaragoza in the State of Mexico has secured a 15-year loan of up to MXP430m from Scotiabank Inverlat to finance infrastructure projects, according to Moody’s, which rates it Aa2.mx/Baa2. The municipality of Atizapan de Zaragoza has pledged the rights to 30% of its federal participation revenues as source of payment for all obligations in the trust. This amount is transferred by the state government directly into the trust under irrevocable instructions issued by the municipality. The spread over TIIE is on a ratings grid and the maximum interest rate is 9.5% over the life of the loan. Moody’s also notes that Atizapan de Zaragoza has sizable borrowing plans, putting debt indicators among the highest for municipalities in Mexico rated by Moody’s. The transaction includes a reserve fund which, according to the agency’s projections – under severe stress scenarios – never drops below 3.7x monthly debt service.
Carlyle Divests Mexican Telecom
Carlyle Group’s Mexican buyouts team has completed what it says is the first portfolio divestiture in Mexico, selling Hispanic Teleservices Corporation (HTC) to larger French competitor Teleperformance. “HTC was an LBO that also had a growth component. This is the type of deal we’re looking at in Mexico,” Miguel Valenzuela, a director at Carlyle in Mexico, tells LatinFinance. The original purchase in 2005 was financed with a bilateral loan from Scotiabank, which resulted in a total leverage level of around 2.1x. Carlyle’s Mexico group looks to invest $10m-$15m in equity per deal. It is drawing from a $134m fund, of which roughly $84m has already been spent across three deals so far, including HTC, cosmetics company Arabela, and a university. While Carlyle would not disclose the price at which it bought and sold HTC, Valenzuela says he expects the firm’s investors to be very pleased with the return.
Grupo Kuo Tees Up Leveraged Loan
Grupo Kuo, the Mexican manufacturing conglomerate, is raising $225m in a dual tranche loan financing via Citi which is expected to close in January. It includes a $175m 5-year amortizing senior term loan and a $50m revolver. The transaction pays 125bp out of the box, on a leverage grid, according to a banker familiar with the terms. At 3.0x leverage it pays Libor plus 125bp, 87.5bp for 2.5x-3.0x, 70bp for 2.0x-2.5x, and 50bp at below 2.0x. The new facility starts amortizing in year three, according to another banker familiar with the terms. Kuo enters a rough market for syndications as lenders turn more selective and raise margins while their own cost of funds rises. Leveraged loans in particular are under pressure, though loans specialists say deals can still get done if structured properly. Kuo is refinancing debt that has been sitting on its balance sheet for some years. In October, it paid down some of that with a $200m issue of 9.75% 2017 notes via Citi and Credit Suisse. Kuo was previously called DESC.
