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Cementos Lima Pours New PF Deal

Peru’s Cementos Lima is heard in the market with a project loan to finance a new venture in the US called Drake Cement. The $106m facility pays Libor plus 135bp and has a parent guarantee during the construction period through the scheduled completion date, says a banker away from the deal. Should the project run over, pricing switches to Libor plus 160bp. In the post construction period, starting in year four, pricing begins at Libor+150bp and steps up to 170bp in year five, 190bp in year seven and 210bp in year nine, says the executive away from the transaction. BBVA is heard leading.

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CMPC Targets $250m with Relationships

Chilean pulp and paper company CMPC has launched a 5-year bullet loan of up to $250m to a group of relationship banks. The deal offers Libor plus 55bp, a seemingly thin margin given the cost of funding for banks today, though considerably wider than what the Chilean borrower might have achieved a year ago. Bankers away from the deal speculate CMPC will succeed in raising the funds, though it may have to resort to leaning on banks. The deal is heard underwritten for $150m by leads Santander, BBVA and Bank of Tokyo Mitsubishi. Another $100m is being targeted at other relationship banks. EDC is heard to have taken a $35m MLA ticket.

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Argentine Borrower Heard Growing Loan

Argentina’s Panamerican Energy is heard to have upsized its $150m 3-year loan to $200m. The facility, which pays Libor plus 225bp, is led by Calyon and JPMorgan, with ABN also in the top tier. Itau is an MLA. The top three banks are heard to have underwritten the full $150m, say bankers away from the transaction. When more banks came in, the borrower found its deal oversubscribed and agreed to increase size, say bankers.

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Panamerican Energy Wrapping up Loan

Argentina’s Panamerican Energy is set to close on a $150m 3-year amortizing loan. The transaction pays Libor plus 225bp, say executives close to the process. JPMorgan, Calyon and ABN AMRO led the facility, with Itau acting as MLA and local intermediary. Itau has a presence in Argentina and loan representatives in both Buenos Aires and Chile.

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Peru’s Cofide Brings $150m Loan

Peruvian development bank Cofide has launched a $150m loan to general syndication. The deal is a 3-year amortizing step-up with an average life of 2.5 years. It pays Libor plus 150.0bp in year one, 162.5bp in year two and 175.0bp in year three, with commitment fees of 25bp-35bp depending on ticket size. Average tickets are heard at $10m. Barclays and Standard Chartered have joint books. Cofide has a number of social programs it is seeking to fund. It is 90% owned by the Peruvian government, rated BBB minus by Fitch and BB+ by the other two agencies. CAF has a 2% stake.

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CFE Refused to Flex on Loan

CFE, the Mexican state-owned power utility, had the option to flex the pricing on its $2bn 3-year loan, launched at Libor plus 40bp. But it refused to do so, insisting instead that it could raise the money with its relationship banks. Some of those banks either left or reduced their commitments, while the five-bank bookrunning group, which pledged a combined $1.25bn – $250m each – apparently also politely declined to increase its commitment level, despite being asked. CFE resorted to marketing the deal directly to potential participants, playing its already worn and tattered relationship card. “This is good for all banks to see that to be successful, a deal needs to be properly priced to clear today’s market,” says a banker involved in the syndication. Whether it is successful or not, CFE has provided a clear example of how changing markets and the expectations of some high grade borrowers are at odds. Something has to give, and in this case, CFE chose to raise less over setting a precedent of wider pricing. “The market flex is new culture that needs to be implemented,” said a banker away from the process. The borrower may walk away from this deal with a bruised ego, having realized its ability to pressure lenders has been weakened.

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Gerdau Forges $500m Syndication

Brazil’s Grupo Gerdau is preparing to raise $500m in the loan market for an unknown acquisition. The facility, being shopped to MLAs, has a 3-year tenor and offers Libor plus 125bp, say bankers away from the transaction. Last Fall, Gerdau clinched a $2.75bn acquisition facility that included a 5-year working capital piece at Libor plus 125bp, as well as 5- and 6-year trade tranches at 100bp and 125bp over. The new facility is heard to be a separate initiative, and its syndication will overlap with the company’s $2bn equity offering in the US and Brazil, set to price on April 24. Citi is leading the loan financing, while JPMorgan and Itau BBA have books on the equity offering.

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Microfinance Offers Haven for Investors

Microfinance is a stable, low risk business that offers a haven in volatile times, according to Helen Alexander, manager at ProCredit Holdings, a German company that controls several microfinance institutions in LatAm. “Microfinance has very low risk; very low default rates,” says Alexander. Stability in the sector will continue, Alexander says, even through the current markets crisis. Local and foreign capital markets for debt could find opportunities for participating in refinancing of microfinance, Alexander says, adding that transactions bring good returns with the added value of a social benefit. Alexander was a panelist in a seminar at IDB meetings in Miami that reviewed techniques, methodologies and technologies for the microfinance sector in LatAm.

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