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Colombia’s Exito Expects Full Payment from Venezuela

Colombia’s retailer Exito has received $72.4m out of a $90.5m payment it is owed from the sale of Venezuela’s Cativen retailer to the Venezuelan government. Exito expects to receive the last installment of $18.1m in November 2012 which would finalize the transaction. Exito officials could not immediately be reached for comment. The payments to Exito stem from French retailer Casino’s decision in November 2010 to sell an 80.1% stake in Cativen to the Venezuelan government for $690m. The sale included Exito’s 28.6% holding in the company. As part of the deal with the government, Casino retained 19.9% to provide operational support. The deal involved a 60% upfront payment to Casino upon the closing of the deal, with 20% paid in cash and 40% in two dollar denominated promissory notes maturing in Nov 30 2010 and Nov 30 2011.

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AMX RMB Bond Sees A2 Rating

Moody’s has assigned an A2 rating to America Movil’s (AMX) proposed RMB1.9bn ($300m) of senior notes. Proceeds are expected to be used for yuan capital expenditure funding. The outlook is stable. The proposed notes will not be guaranteed by Radio Movil Dipsa, AMX’s largest subsidiary which has provided guarantees to AMX’s previously-issued unsecured notes. Since October 2011, AMX has been issuing senior notes without this guarantee, the agency says. AMX has mandated HSBC to arrange 2-day fixed-income investor meetings in Asia starting today.

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Banco de Bogota Preps Possible Take-Out

Banco de Bogota, Colombia’s second largest lender, will kick off global investor meetings in the US, Europe and Latin America this week. The debut borrower will see accounts in London and Santiago Tuesday, Boston and Lima Wednesday before wrapping up in New York and LA Thursday. Citi, HSBC and JPMorgan are leading the potential 144A/RegS transaction, rated Baa2. Banco de Bogota secured a $1.2bn 1-year bridge through those financial institutions to help it acquire BAC-Credomatic, a sizeable Central American bank that represents half of Banco de Bogota’s assets. Banco de Bogota’s CFO Maria Luisa Rojas Giraldo told LatinFinance in September the bank was looking at a $1bn 10-year bond to replace the bridge loan. Last month the bank was sounding the market with a $500m 3-year loan carrying a margin of Libor plus 225bp. The same banks were leading the loan transaction.

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Banco de Chile Talks Price

Banco de Chile is looking to pay TIIE+50bp on an up to MXP1.5bn ($111m) 3-year bond, marking a debut for the issuer in the Mexican domestic market. Banco de Chile will be the third Chilean issuer to raise money there following similar moves by Banco de Credito e Inversiones (BCI) and miner Molymet. In July, BCI priced a MXP2bn 5-year floater at TIIE + 40bp, while Molymet in April issued MXP1.5bn 1.5-year bonds at TIIE+55bp. Pricing is scheduled for December 6. Banamex and JPMorgan are leading the transaction, rated AAA on a local sale.

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Infonavit Preps MXP RMBS

Mexican mortgage and social services entity Infonavit plans to sell an up to MXP1.1bn ($82m) UDI-denominated RMBS in the domestic market this week. The 28-year security will be backed by Infonavit mortgages targeted at middle and high income borrowers. Pricing is scheduled for December 7. While official guidance has yet to be released, the issuer is heard considering an interest rate in the 4.5%-5% range. “This is a preliminary forecast as pricing is dependent on how the market is at the moment,” notes a person familiar with the transaction. Proceeds will be used to create new mortgages. Banamex is managing the sale, rated AAA on a local scale.

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Mexico Holds Rates

Mexico’s central bank has left the benchmark interest rate unchanged at 4.5%. The bank based its decision on positive signs regarding domestic productivity and inflation, along with a continuing deterioration in the global economy, it says. “With respect to growth, Banxico discounts the fact that domestic aggregate demand has been improving recently,” say analysts at Nomura Securities. “In fact, it describes the balance of risks for growth as worse than before. Clearly, Banxico seems to be focusing on the downward revisions to Europe’s growth outlook, which is headed for a recession, and on the lower forecasts for the US economy by the Fed.”

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VW Bank Prices MXP Debut

Mexico’s Volkswagen Bank has raised MXP 1bn ($71m) in a domestic bond debut, pricing a 3-year floater at TIIE + 50bp. Private banking accounts and mutual funds mostly participated, allowing the issuer to see 1.4 x demand. VW’s pricing is being compared to Daimler, which in September, priced a MXP1bn 3-year bond at TIIE+50bp. The car manufacturer then saw demand reach 1.4x and also priced against talk of TIIE + 40-50bp. “Despite volatility in the market, pricing shows there is liquidity in Mexico,” says in banker familiar. VW has a MXP7bn program, and is expected to become a frequent issuer going forward. The bonds, rated AAA on a national scale, will be guaranteed by parent Volkswagen Financial Services. HSBC and Santander managed the transaction.

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PDVSA Turns to Chinese Credit to Guarantee Brazil JV

Venezuela’s PDVSA has announced that a $1.5bn credit line will serve as a guarantee for its 30% participation in a joint refinery with Petrobras. This came just a day after the Brazilian oil company agreed to give PDVSA more time to finalize the transaction. Cash and a credit line by the China Development Bank will insure the project’s advance, says PDVSA. A spokesman for the company declined to offer more details. On Thursday, Petrobras announced it had given PDVSA 60 more days to settle its affairs on needed loan guarantees with Brazil’s BNDES to finalize its participation in the $13.36bn project for the Abreu e Lima refinery. The PDVSA statement quotes the company’s president, Rafael Ramirez, saying that it has made the needed money available and “all that is left is for BNDES to do the logistical work” necessary to move forward. Under the terms of the Pernambuco-based refinery, first signed in March 2008, PDVSA would take a 40% stake in the plant and become a main heavy crude supplier for the refinery. The total investment in the plant was originally expected to reach $4bn but now it is estimated at $13.36bn.

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Infonacot Prices MXP Securitization

Mexican state-run lender Instituto Fonacot has issued MXP1.665bn ($122m) in 3-year bonds. The transaction was 2.23x oversubscribed and priced at TIIE+65bp after generating some MXP3.6bn in demand. Scotia and BBVA Bancomer managed the transaction, rated AAA on a local scale. Infonacot last visited the local market in 2010, paying TIIE+39bp on a 3-year bond, via the same leads.

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