GLOBALCAPITAL INTERNATIONAL LIMITED, a company

incorporated in England and Wales (company number 15236213),

having its registered office at 4 Bouverie Street, London, UK, EC4Y 8AX

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Mexico

  • Bankers following Mexico’s second trade in less than a week said that the sovereign had managed to price its euro deal impressively tight to its dollar curve as the government wrapped up its funding needs for the year.
  • The United Mexican States has released price guidance on its first euro bond for over a year.
  • The head of Mexico’s public credit office told GlobalCapital that the Latin American sovereign had been particularly keen to set a strong precedent for the country’s issuers after it kicked off a potentially volatile year with a $3.2bn blowout dual-tranche.
  • Mexico returned to its habitual role of opening the Latin American bond markets for the year on Wednesday with a $2.6bn trade including a tap of its 2048s to make the most of an exceptionally flat curve.
  • Bankers and investors covering Latin America were grateful this week for the end of a hectic year in which unprecedented levels of issuance have sprung from the region, with strong conditions set to continue in 2018.
  • Mexican payroll lender Alpha Holdings sold its inaugural cross-border bond deal on Tuesday, becoming the latest in a growing group of Lat Am non-bank lenders to have issued internationally.
  • Mexican payroll lender Alpha Holdings sold its inaugural cross-border bond deal on Tuesday though it was unable to tighten beyond initial price thoughts.
  • Alpha Holdings, the Mexico-headquartered non-bank lender, will look to price its first ever international bond on Tuesday after setting initial price thoughts on Monday.
  • Mexico’s largest private sector energy company, IEnova, was overwhelmed with orders on Thursday as bond investors welcomed the chance to pick up some new paper not from Brazil or Argentina.
  • Alpha Holding, which specialises in consumer and SME lending in Mexico and Colombia, has named leads for a dollar bond.
  • As two financial market favourites made important strides in Mexican public life this week, bond investors in Europe gave an extraordinary welcome to high yield cement company Cemex on Tuesday.
  • The day after the president named him as Mexico’s new central bank chief, Alejandro Díaz de León tells GlobalCapital about the inflation challenge, and adds that the world’s central bankers should be keeping a close eye on the “atypical” business cycle in advanced economies.