Bloomberg — Mexico tapped global capital markets for the second time this year, raising $2.9 billion of bonds aimed at buying back some of the Latin American nation’s outstanding debt.
Of that amount, Mexico raised $1.35 billion from the sale of new bonds due in 2053. The country issued another $1.59 billion to buy back existing notes maturing between 2041 to 2052, the government said in a statement late Thursday.
The final amount of new 30-year bonds will depend on how much of the debt is accepted by the country. The results of the tender offer show Mexico repurchasing as much as $2 billion of existing notes, according to a separate government statement on Friday.
“I suspect they want to profit from the cheapness of the long-end to extend the maturity of their portfolio,” said Guillaume Tresca, global strategist at Generali Insurance Asset Management in Paris.
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The sale is Mexico’s second in international markets this year, following a $4 billion offering in January. The nation’s dollar debt has handed investors average returns of 5.4% this year, compared to 1.6% in an index of peers, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
Last year, Mexico was the second-largest sovereign issuer of hard-currency debt in the developing world, selling about $9.5 billion in bonds, the data show.
Citigroup Global Markets Inc., HSBC Securities Inc., Mizuho Securities USA LLC and Morgan Stanley & Co. LLC are running both the new offering and the tender offer. Morgan Stanley & Co. LLC was tapped by Mexico as the billing and delivering bank for the tender offer.
--With assistance from Carolina Gonzalez and Ezra Fieser
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