Latin American issuers have built up a following among wealthy investors in Hong Kong and Singapore – as long as commodity prices don’t plunge.
Category: Regions
Colombia Seeks Loans
Colombia is seeking loans of another $1.2 billion from the Inter American Development Bank (IADB). The highly-indebted country, which accounted for 12 percent of total lending approved by the IADB in 2004, has recently announced it would disburse $1.3 billion in emergency loans extended by the IADB in 2003. IADB president Enrique Iglesias has said that the bank plans to experiment in extending loans to Colombia in Colombian pesos.
Mexican Inflation Accelerates
Mexican consumer prices rose 0.45% in March as higher international oil prices pushed up prices for gasoline, natural gas and jet fuel. The Central Bank also said prices for agricultural goods are rising. However, the core inflation rate, which excludes volatile energy and food prices, fell to 0.31% last month from 0.42% in February.
Remarkable Results
Enrique García has turned the Andean Development Corp. from an obscure, second-string entity into the best-run development agency in Latin America.
Mexico’s Backward Politics
There are many reasons to dislike Mexico City’s mayor Andrés López Obrador. He is a populist and a nationalist with retrograde ideas on economic policy. Amlo, as the mayor is known, believes in democracy but centralizes power in his own hands. He is personally honest, but surrounded himself with crooks. Yet to even consider barring the country’s most popular politician from running in next year’s presidential election shows how insecure Mexico’s ruling elite has become. His impeachment will begin Thursday on charges that he ignored a court order stopping the city from building a hospital access road on private land.
Mexico is Latin America’s biggest economy and one of just three in the region with an investment grade rating. But its political sophistication lags far behind Brazil, Colombia or Chile. The Revolutionary Institutional Party ruled Mexico for 71 years until the current conservative government of President Vicente Fox took office in 2000. Removing Amlo from the race would ensure the PRI’s return to power.
He has promised a campaign of civil disobedience if he is removed from office and prevented from running for president. Markets are in turmoil as well they might. Economic upheaval often coincides with government changes. The next government’s legitimacy would suffer if Amlo is barred from the election. Mexico is no banana republic, so it should stop behaving like one. It cannot hope to evolve into a modern and sophisticated state until its politicians grow up.
Pemex To Issue Up To US$1.8bn Bonds In Q2
Mexico’s state oil company Pemex plans to issue up to 20bn pesos (US$1.8bn) of bonds, most of which will have variable interest rates, in the second quarter this year, the company said in a statement.
Profits Rise at Walmex
Wal-Mart de México boosted profits by 35% in the first quarter, thanks to Mexico’s biggest surge in consumer spending in four years. Net income rose to $166 million. March same-store sales rose 9.5% versus a decline of 2.7% a year earlier. Retail sales rose more than 6% a month between September and January. Walmex wants to open 70 new stores this year.
At the Forefront
Oil wealth is often considered a curse, but Trinidad & Tobago – behind
the foresight of its leaders – has built the Caribbean’s most dynamic
economy on a large and well-managed oil and gas industry.
Ecuador Rejects Reform Package
Ecuador’s congress overwhelmingly rejected 68-3 government draft legislation giving the private sector a greater role in the state-run pension system and government-controlled oil industry, improving the quality and structure of the country’s public finances. President Lucio Gutiérrez fired the entire Supreme Court in December, poisoning relations with the opposition-dominated congress.
A Cut Below Mexico
It took one transaction for telephone giant Telmex to anchor itself in the US high grade market by piercing Mexico’s sovereign ceiling.
