Nearly three long years after its default, the Argentine government is about to unveil the details of its "final" offer to bondholders.
The debt workout for Argentina's largest locally-owned private sector bank, mangled in the country's financial crisis, gives Banco Galicia room to breathe and rebuild its balance sheet.
Argentina's private retirement funds may be impacted less by the government's default than many think. That's good news for pensioners.
Jun 4 - 5, 2013 | The Westin, Lima, Peru
Explicitly designed to connect the international investment community and leaders from the Andean... more
Jul 16 - 17, 2013 | Sheraton on the Park, Sydney, Australia
An in depth look at the rapidly evolving state of the Latin America Australia investment... more
Sep 10 - 11, 2013 | Westin Beijing Chaoyang, Beijing, China
LA-CIF is the leading event connecting Latin America and China. Through an invitation-only,... more
Sep 13, 2013 | Shilla Hotel, Seoul, Korea
LA-KIF will examine the rapidly evolving LatAm-Korea investment relationship, the pace & direction... more
How busy will LatAm global-local currency debt issuance be this year?
More than 1 deal/month
1-3 deals/quarter
1-2 deals all year
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At a fundamental level, the issue is how to generate healthy returns in the medium to long term. Policy holders can see their fund go down over the course of a week or a month, but what we really should be looking at is returns over 20 or 30 years.
Daniel Schydlowsky, Peru’s banking, insurance and private pension fund regulator
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