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Famsa Debuts On Mexican Exchange

Mexican home appliance retailer Grupo Famsa successfully floated 30% of its stock on the Mexican stock exchange on Friday, achieving a share price of 26 pesos ($2.36). The global IPO raised $230 million, which the company plans to use to pay down debt and fund expansion. The issue was coordinated by BBVA Bancomer and Credit Suisse.

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Iusacell Extends Swap Deadline

Mexican cell phone operator Iusacell has extended the deadline of its $350 million debt swap offer until June 1. The company is offering to swap 14 ¼% bonds, due 2006, for new bonds at 10%, maturing in 2013. The offer was originally due to expire on May 18. The swap is part of a larger debt restructuring program. The firm reached an agreement with creditors to restructure $750 million of debt in January, following protracted negotiations.

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Chocolates And Fifco Offer To Buy Pozuelo

The food and beverages arm of Colombia’s largest conglomerate, GEA – Nacional de Chocolates – and Costa Rica’s Florida Ice & Farm (Fifco) have made an offer of $205 million to buy Pozuelo, the Costa Rican cookie and juice subsidiary of Spain’s Ebro Puleva. The acquisition will give the buyers around 28% of the Costa Rican cookie market. Pozuelo distributes its products throughout Central America and its acquisition by Chocolates fits with the company’s strategy of consolidating its distribution base in the region.

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YPFB Becomes Bolivia’s Third-Largest Oil Comany

Bolivia’s state-owned energy company, Yacimientos Petrolíferos Fiscales Bolivianos (YPFB), will today, Friday, become the country’s third-largest oil company when it takes ownership of the country’s nationalized assets, giving it control over 15% of Bolivia’s gas reserves. The transfer of the shares of the country’s three listed oil concerns gives YPFB a 51% controlling holding. Brazil’s Petrobras and Spain’s Repsol YPF remain the two largest oil companies in the country.

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Colombia Hopes To Raise $451 Million From Bancafe Sale

Colombia is to sell off the country’s largest state-owned bank – Bancafe – for no less than $451.44 million (1.09 trillion pesos), according to the government. The bank will be sold off to the highest bidder in the third-quarter of the year. Foreign and domestic banks will be permitted to bid for the institution. The sale of Bancafe will leave only one state-run bank – Banco Agrario – operating in Colombia.

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Exito Plans Share Offering

Colombian retailer Almacenes Exito is planning to sell more shares via the Bogotá stock exchange. The details of the sale are not yet known but the company recently announced it will spend $150 million this year expanding its network of outlets in the country to meet increasing consumer demand and to counter growing competition.

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Mexico Bucks The Trend

While other Latin American countries move to reduce foreign-investor involvement in their energy sectors, Mexico has said it may move to open up its sector to more external participation. Energy minister, Fernando Canales, has said that Mexico may amend its constitution to allow foreign companies a greater share of the country’s energy sector. The move would be made after the country’s July 7 elections.

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Xstrata To Buy Peru Tintaya Copper Mine

Swiss mining company Xstrata has agreed to pay $750 million to Anglo-Australian firm BHP Billiton for its Tintaya copper mine in the south of Peru to consolidate its presence in the mining sector in Latin America. Xstrata is already developing a copper project in Peru – Las Bambas – in the south at Apurimac. It also has an important copper and gold operation – Alumbrera – in the northwest of Argentina.

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Comcel Approves Debt Issue

The shareholders of Colombian mobile phone operator Comcel, owned by Mexican telco América Móvil, have approved an offering of $412.5 million worth (1 billion pesos) of local currency-denominated debt. The debt will be issued in the form of bonds (750 million pesos) and commercial paper (250 million pesos). Last year, Comcel issued peso-denominated debt worth around $200 million to protect against fluctuations in the US dollar against the Colombian currency.

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