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America Movil Buys TIM Peru

Mobile telecommunications giant America Movil, owned by Mexican tycoon Carlos Slim, bought Peruvian mobile telecom operator TIM Peru for $505 million. The deal comes on the heels of America Movil´s purchase of Chilean mobile phone operator Smartcom earlier this month. American Movil bought BellSouth´s mobile assets in Latin America last year for $5.85 billion.

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CORRECTION:

In Friday’s LatinFinance Daily Briefing we incorrectly reported that Mexican cellphone operator América Móvil had bought BellSouth´s mobile assets in Latin America for $5.85 billion last year. In fact, BellSouth sold to Spain’s Telefónica. We apologize for the error.

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Fox May Sign Sugar Law

Mexican President Vicente Fox may concede to sugar farmers’ demands and sign legislation that would help keep prices of the commodity from falling, Agriculture Minister Javier Usabiaga said. Thousands of sugar growers from 15 states began blocking the entrance to the agriculture ministry in Mexico City two days ago. The legislation, which Fox had previously promised to veto, would bring back a formula for setting prices mills pay for sugar.

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Ecuador Plans Bond Sale

Ecuador will sell bonds worth $300 million to Venezuela in September, according to the country´s Economy Minister Magdalena Barreiro. Barreiro, who took office this week, says Ecuador is seeking guarantees on the debt by the Andean Development Corporation (CAF). Venezuela, continuing President Hugo Chavez´s policy of building economic ties with other South American countries, has made a proposal to process Ecuadorian crude oil in Venezuelan refineries.

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Fox May Veto Pemex Bill

Mexican President Vicente Fox may veto a bill approved by congress to reduce taxes on state-owned oil monopoly Petroleos Mexicanos, said a presidential spokesman. Fox is concerned the bill, which Mexico´s finance ministry has estimated will lower Pemex’s annual taxes by $2.4 billion, will reduce tax revenue too much. In the first six months of this year taxes on Pemex accounted for 35 percent of the government’s $88 billion in revenue.

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Codelco Boosts Price Forecast

Codelco, the world’s biggest copper producer, increased its forecast for the price of the metal to $1.45-1.50 a pound this year, up from $1.30 in March, saying output hasn’t kept pace with demand from China. Copper has averaged $1.48 a pound this year. Earlier this year CEO Juan Villarzu floated the idea of privatizing the state-owned company to allow it easier access to capital markets, but that idea was rejected by Chilean president Ricardo Lagos. Codelco is looking to ramp up production in the next few years.

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America Movil Buys Smartcom

Mexican wireless phone operator America Movil bought Chilean telecoms group Smartcom from Spain´s Endesa for $505 million. America Movil, owned by Mexican magnate Carlos Slim, said the purchase expands its client base in Chile by 1.7 million subscribers. The company has been snatching up companies throughout South America and now has 74 million cell phone subscribers throughout Latin America. In Mexico, the company operates under the brand Telcel and has 32.2 million clients.

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Pemex Reports Earnings

Mexico’s state-owned oil giant Petroleos Mexicanos (Pemex) posted a net profit of $179 million in the second quarter, with sales up 14 percent year-on-year to $20.9 billion. The company paid $12.9 billion in taxes to the Mexican government, up 16 percent. The average price of exported Mexican crude stood at a record high of $47.90 per barrel, higher than the $27 per barrel envisaged in the government´s budget.

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Mexico Sells Debt

Mexico sold $189 million of peso bonds set to mature in 2024 and priced to yield 9.70 percent. The country has reduced its annual inflation rate to 4.33 percent at the end of June from as high as 5.43 percent last November, raising investor confidence and helping yields on 20-year debt drop from as high as 11.18 percent in April of this year.

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WTO Rebuffs EU

The World Trade Organization rejected European Union plans to triple its
banana-import tariff in a victory for Latin American producers seeking to
maintain access to the world’s biggest banana market. The EU was planning
to introduce a flat tariff of $281 a metric ton next year in place of the
existing quota-based import system. Led by Ecuador, the world’s biggest
banana exporter, seven Latin American governments earlier this year
collectively opposed the EU’s planned single tariff. The 25-nation EU buys
3.8 million tons of bananas a year

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