Latin America and Caribbean
LATEST ARTICLES
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The country’s banking system seems as solid as ever, but its banks are seeing an uptick in delinquencies that could spin out of control.
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The echoes of 2014 have been loud in Brazil’s private banking industry over the past 12 months. A precipitous fall in interest rates – followed by a meteoric rise – has left the market completely the same but also very different.
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When the news broke that Argentina was thinking of merging its currency with that of its neighbour, Brazil, my immediate question was: which Argentine peso?
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The bank’s chief financial officer says Inter is moving into an expansion phase, following an ambitious and aspirational ‘north star’.
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The bank’s new head must withstand political pressure to extend subsidized credit and lower underwriting standards.
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A persuasive case can be made for nearshoring, but so far in Latin America there has been little direct evidence that it is happening. In Mexico, things are about to change.
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Nearshoring has been seen to drive credit growth among the country’s smaller regional banks.
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The region’s advantage is likely to be short-lived and could fade by 2024, according to JPMorgan's private bank head.
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Local flows to fixed income and equity redemptions limit ECM liquidity.
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Restrictions on redundancies force out larger banks in Mexico from bidding for business.
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Uruguay reignites the debate on transition finance with its sovereign sustainability-linked bond.
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The bank is focusing on organic growth by acquiring retail clients and launching a private bank.
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Proactive risk tightening in 2021 sees surging return on equity as scale brings operational leverage.
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The market reaction to the third-quarter results from Brazil’s second-largest private bank has revealed investor sensitivity to banks’ deteriorating asset quality.
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Bank’s ESG head urges competitors and regulators to respond more quickly to emissions accounting challenge.
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While fintechs have been thriving in Brazil and throughout Latin America, the region’s local stock exchanges have failed to attract IPOs.
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Brazil’s agribusiness sector is booming on the back of sky-high commodity prices. The public banks that have long financed the sector now face a wave of new private-sector competitors.
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The Brazilian world of digital banks has it all: billionaire unicorns, sub-brands created by the incumbents and completely new disruptors. But one player has been quietly growing under the radar to become the country’s second-largest digital player.
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The new administration is expected to be less receptive to bank privatization as the result boosts ‘Lula portfolio’ stocks.
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The market for remittances is expected to grow by almost 10% in 2022, driven by diaspora-linked savings.
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If Lula wins in Brazil, he is unlikely to focus on the strength of the private-sector banks because fintechs are doing that for him already.
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New deal adds two-year payment deferral to existing natural-disaster clause to mitigate impact of a future pandemic.
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While the impact on energy is centre stage, the war in Ukraine is also wreaking havoc on soft commodity prices and trade routes. Trade in agricultural commodities is taking a hit. The pool of banks financing these commodities is already dwindling, while the risks for those that remain are growing.
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Europe and the US remain the focus, but LatAm and Asia Pacific will also contribute to volatility in 2022.
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In its latest funding round, Brazilian-based Creditas proved that valuations for the stronger fintechs can buck the falling trend seen among the large, publicly listed startups.
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Banco do Brasil’s outstanding second quarter means that scrutiny will intensify at its domestic rival.
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Argentina faces yet another financial crisis and has brought in a new ‘super-minister’ to try to calm the market and placate the IMF. While he will find a sympathetic ear at the fund, not many other international investors are listening anymore.
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The US bank has reorganized its Latam wealth management business to focus on faster growing countries, but home bias remains a tough instinct to overcome.
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Will higher rates today come at the price of more pain tomorrow?