Cemex – whose Ready Mix USA joint venture is selling 12 quarries and other assets to San Francisco-based private equity shop SPO Partners for $420m – says it will use the proceeds to pay down more bank debt. Cemex owns a 49.9% stake in Ready Mix, and stands to receive $100m from the sale of non-strategic assets. The Mexican company says it will use the cash to continue paying down a $15bn mountain of debt it renegotiated last October. Other parts of the prepayment effort include $1.7bn from Holcim Australia, $2.2bn in equity and mandatory converts issued last year, and $2.3bn in USD and MXP denominated bonds, says the company.
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Mexico Kicks off Local 2020 Bond Auction
Mexico’s central bank says it will place Thursday up to MXP25bn in 10-year syndicated bonds via the first local debt market auction of its kind. The coupon is 8%. The government bonds, due June 2020, will be auctioned Tuesday and placed Thursday, says Banxico. Gerardo Rodriguez, Mexico’s deputy undersecretary for public credit, said earlier this month that the deal would raise MXP15bn-MXP25bn. The Mexican government is trying to broaden its investor base with the new domestic debt sale mechanism, which is designed to foster liquidity in new peso benchmarks. The issuer hopes that the bonds will be eligible for fixed income indices. Mexico has named Santander, JPMorgan, Bank of America Merrill Lynch and BBVA Bancomer as managers, with Banamex, ING and HSBC co-managers.
Ecuador Signs IDB Loan for Infrastructure
The IDB has approved a $350m loan to Ecuador to help finance the country’s infrastructure program, says the ministry of foreign relations. The 25-year loan has a 6-year grace period and an interest rate based on Libor.
RB Capital to Issue CRIs
Brazil investment firm RB Capital is structuring and issuing BRL60m in certificados de recebiveis imobiliarios due in 2017. It will pay 230bp over inflation-linked NTN-B due 2015 paper, says Marcelo Michalua, managing director at RB Capital. The NTN-B was yielding 6.45% Monday. The A rated issue is backed by future receivables from 2 of General Shopping’s majority-owned malls. General Shopping will use proceeds to develop more commercial real estate. Michalua says he expects to close the book on the issue in early April. General Shopping owns and operates 13 malls in Brazil.
Telefonica Gets ECA Funds for Network
Spain’s Telefonica has secured a $472m 9-year credit facility from Swedish ECAs to help it finance its European and LatAm 2G and 3G networks. The loan is priced at an undisclosed fixed rate and matures in 2019. Sweden’s export credit and export insurance arms SEK and EKN are providing funds and guarantees, while Citi and Deutsche Bank are the commercial lenders of record.
JBS Closes Jumbo Local Convert
Meatpacker JBS has sold BRL3.48bn in 60-year debentures convertible into JBS US stock, including BRL2.27bn bought by BNDESPar, the investment unit of development bank BNDES. Instead of carrying a fixed coupon, the converts pay a combination of dividends and distributions with no set amount, according to a deal prospectus. The payments can be made partly or entirely in cash, and must be previously announced by the company. There are also a number of conditions that could qualify for the bonds’ conversion into shares. The main one is if the common shares on the Bovespa reach BRL12.50 after having traded for 60 consecutive days in a range of BRL6.50-BRL12.50. If a liquidity event occurs, the shares are also convertible, according to the prospectus, which provides full details on what constitutes such an event. Banco Bradesco managed the issue. Barclays Capital sees the capitalization as a positive development because the debentures are likely to be converted into equity. It adds that this will increase the company’s liquidity and improve credit metrics as proceeds will be used to pay debt related to last year’s acquisition of US-based Pilgrim’s Pride for $2.6bn.
Mexico Joins Small-Cap Stock Bid
The equity market environment could favor LatAm small caps in the near-term, according to analysts, some of which tip less liquid Mexico stocks as a buy. “When you have growth, you generally have small caps doing well,” notes a portfolio manager at one of Brazil’s largest asset managers, with over BRL500m invested in small caps across 3 funds. The executive’s shop has a 6% 2010 Brazil GDP growth target. He notes, however, that recent losses for Ibovespa were driven by generalized global sell-off. The latter hit disproportionally large, liquid and well-owned names that make up the majority of the index. Brazil, BlackRock portfolio manager Will Landers estimates that if the Bovespa returns 30% this year, Brazil small caps could jump by 45%-50%. Less liquid names elsewhere in the region could also surprise on the upside. JPMorgan believes small caps in Mexico are likely to outperform thanks to depressed valuations versus larger cap names and growth premia that are not reflected in current prices. The shop’s top picks in the country include Urbi and ICA. Citi’s LatAm equity strategy head Geoffrey Dennis, however, sees the coming year as complicated for smaller equity issuers. “I would tend to think the cycle in 2010 is not very conducive for small cap outperformance,” he says. Dennis notes that 2009 offered more attractive conditions for outperformance and adds that generalized uncertainty will lead to a more volatile environment that requires more stockpicking and trading, and less buy and hold. The MSCI LatAm small cap index has risen 170% in the 12 months through February 19, most of which is a correction after a similarly-sized plunge in 2008-2009. The Ibovespa was up 70% in 12 months to last Friday.
Small Caps Thrash Brazil Index
Recent IPOs from Brazilian companies with small and medium-sized market caps are giving investors better returns than the Ibovespa by significant margins. The time period under consideration is short, and high beta Brazil has been whacked around by negative global trends. But the small-cap outperformance trend is backed by a belief among some market participants that companies with niche business lines serving the domestic economy are poised for strong growth in the coming year. “Some of these IPOs were priced well below the range, which is what you have to do with a small deal,” says Will Landers, portfolio manager at BlackRock, whose $8.2bn in LatAm-dedicated funds includes up to 35% exposure to mid and small caps. “You have to leave a little upside,” adds the investor, who also manages a $42m LatAm small cap fund. Among outperforming IPOs are Cetip, which through February 19 outperforms the Ibovespa by 16% since pricing late October, according to data from Dealogic and Economatica. Fleury meanwhile beats the index by 21% since a December launch. Aliansce, this year’s first IPO, is 8% higher than the benchmark stock index, and Direcional’s November IPO outpaces the Ibovespa by 8%. Lastly, Multiplus, which priced earlier this month, is beating the index by 14%. The data undermines prevailing conventional wisdom that says investors must stick to liquid, recognized names. “If you have the right story, you can get deals done, even if they’re smaller than $200m,” says a senior LatAm equity banker at a European underwriter.
Mexico Leaves Rates Unchanged
As widely expected, Mexico’s central bank has left its monetary policy rate at 4.5%. Bulltick believes the bank will keep rates at this level for the rest of the year on the back of a massive output gap and an appreciating currency, which mitigate inflationary pressures from tax and prices increases. “The economy is emerging from a significant recession and the central bank is unlikely to tighten monetary conditions as the economy gains traction,” it adds. Goldman Sachs also believes the rate will stay at 4.5% for the rest of the year. “The [central bank’s] statement conveys the notion that it is comfortable with the behavior of inflation expectations for the medium and long-term, which are well anchored,” Goldman adds.
Dilma Gets Brazil Election Nod
Brazil’s cabinet chief Dilma Rousseff was nominated Saturday as the Workers’ Party presidential candidate, as expected. Her popularity is rising in the polls, and Eurasia Group expects her to win against likely main rival Jose Serra. Investors appear to assume her victory will result in policy continuity with Lula. However, analysts including Eurasia say that the precise macro, monetary and industrial policy is in play, and investors should be cautious. The first round of elections is set to be held in October.
