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Kansas City Closes $111m Loan

Mexican railroad Kansas City Southern de Mexico has closed a two-tranche $111m loan, following a May 14 $165m bond issue. The financing consists of an $81m revolver due December 31 2011 and a $30m B-tranche due June 30 2012, which will be used to refinance a 12.50% bond due 2012. The deal is being led by BBVA and Bank of America. EDC, KFW and Bank of Montreal were arrangers and Scotiabank and Comerica acted as co-arrangers. Goldman Sachs led the bond issue.

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Bancolombia to Sell Up To $400m In Preferreds

Bancolombia will sell 60m preferred shares to existing investors at a rate of COP15,200 ($7.95) per share – the average price of the shares over the last 100 days. The offer will be open for 15 business days and buyers can sell their right to purchase the shares to other investors. At the current price, the bank could raise up to $477m, but it will likely cap the international sale at $400m, since the aim of the sale is to provide complementary subordinated capital to match a recent $400m 2017 note offering, priced May 21. Those 7.250% bonds came at 98.661 to yield 7.064% in the transaction via JPMorgan and UBS. UBS was tapped global coordinator for the preferred share offering and Bancolombia will pick a second underwriter.

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Colombia Raises Benchmark Rate to 9%

As was widely expected by the market, Colombia’s Central Bank raised its benchmark interest rate 25bps, from 8.75% to 9%, at its monthly monetary policy meeting on Friday. This is the seventh consecutive month the bank has raised the rate. In a further move to fight inflationary pressures and to curb lending, the bank once again raised commercial banks reserves on deposits. The Central Bank is targeting inflation of between 3.5% and 4.5% this year. Inflation for the 12 months through May was 6.23%, well above that target while consumer prices for the first five months of the year rose to 4.42%.

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Peru GPD April

Peru continued its stellar economic growth in April, with GDP expanding 7.25% in April year on year and taking y-o-y growth for the first four months on the year to 7.45%. The non-primary sector proved to be the strongest, with construction up 13%, manufacturing up 9.87%. The Central Reserve Bank of Peru is forecasting that GDP will expand by 7.2% in this year, while the finance ministry have predicted growth of 7.0%.

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Colombia Completes Tender Offer

Colombia has completed the tender for nine classes of bonds it started Wednesday, receiving more than $1bn in offers on a buyback capped at $950m worth of outstanding bonds. As a result the sovereign was able to choose which maturities it wanted to retire, and ended up focusing on the shorter-dated instruments, said a banker. The sovereign chose to take out the following quantities of the following classes of bonds: 100% of the 8.625% bonds due 2008, the 9.750% bonds due 2011, the 9.75% bonds due 2009 and the 10.50% bonds due 2010. And 50% of 11.75% global TES due 2010 and 25% of 2013 FRNs. Colombia didn’t buy back any of the 10.00% 2012 bonds, the 10.75% 2013 bonds, or the 8.70% 2016 notes. Deutsche Bank and Citi led the exchange and previous day’s $1bn equivalent TES offering.

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Titularizadora Colombiana Sells 100bn RMBS

Titularizadora Colombiana – Colombia’s answer to Fannie Mae – has sold just over $51m worth (100.13bn pesos) of 10-year residential mortgage-backed securities (TIPs) Thursday. The IFC-backed institution plans to sell a second 100bn-peso tranche of its peso-denominated, fixed-rate TIPs later this month. The securities will yield 9.99%. The mortgages backing the securities were originated by Banco Davivienda, Colombia’s third-largest bank.

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Colombia’s Central Bank Likely To Raise Interest Rate Friday

Colombia’s Central Bank is seen likely to increase the benchmark interest rate in its monthly monetary policy meeting on Friday. Continuing inflationary pressures will prompt the Bank to raise the rate from 8.75% to 9%, according to a survey carried out by Dow Jones. The Central Bank is targeting inflation of between 3.5% and 4.5% this year. Inflation for the 12 months through May was 6.23%, well above that target while consumer prices for the first five months of the year rose to 4.42%.

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Caribbean Single Currency on Hold

Among other markets developments seen moving slowly in the Caribbean, a single currency appears some way off. “In a sense the Caribbean is moving in an evolutionary way towards this,” says Carl Ross, senior managing director at Bear Stearns. “If CSME gets up and running and proves to be successful, maybe 10 years down the road they can think about it,” he adds. “The best currency, if there is a single currency in the Caribbean, should be the US dollar. I don’t think a Caribbean currency will ever really work, although I’d love to be proven wrong.” According to the Caribbean Development Bank (CDB), talks on a single currency are on hold until regional market conditions are right. “As far as the single currency is concerned, there is a decision to let that be in abeyance,” says Compton Bourne, president of the CDB. Others are slightly more bullish. Janette Cupid-St. Hilaire, director of public sector finance at the T&T Ministry of Finance, says a single currency is only around 4-5 years off. They were speaking at the Caribbean Investment Forum in Montego Bay, a LatinFinance/Euromoney conference. Delegates are slightly more optimistic about the prospects for a link up between the stock markets of Barbados, Trinidad and Tobago and Jamaica, though exchange officials are still waiting for the regulators. The consensus suggests that unified regional trading could start this year, though Jamaican dealers who have endured much talk and little action remain skeptical.

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World Bank Loan To Boost Colombian Transport System

Colombia’s national urban transport system is to be bolstered with the help of a $207m loan from the World Bank via its unit the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development. A plan to roll out Bogotá’s Transmilenio system in other cities such as Medellín and Barranquilla will be financed with the help of the loan. The fixed-spread loan is repayable in 13.5 years, and carries a grace period of 8.5 years.

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