Skip to content

Overview

Bank of China (Mexico) contributes to 1.5 billion syndicated term loan to CEMEX for general corporate purposes and debt repayment

Commitments (Constant USD, 2023)$65,867,260
Commitment Year2021Country of ActivityMexicoDirect Recipient Country of IncorporationMexicoOverseas JurisdictionMexicoSectorIndustry, Mining, ConstructionFlow TypeLoan

Status

Project lifecycle

Pipeline: Commitment

Pipeline: PledgePipeline: CommitmentImplementationCompletion

Timeline

Key dates

Commitment date
Oct 29, 2021
Last repayment
Oct 28, 2026

Geospatial footprint

Map overview

Visualizes the AidData-provided feature geometry for this project.

Loading map…

Two BoC branches contribute to 1.5 billion syndicated term loan to CEMEX for general corporate purposes and debt repayment. More detailed locational information can be found at: https://www.openstreetmap.org/way/291009244

Stakeholders

Organizations involved in projects and activities supported by financial and in-kind transfers from Chinese government and state-owned entities

Ultimate beneficial owners

At least 25% host country ownership

Funding agencies

State-owned Commercial Banks

  • Bank of China México, S.A., Institución de Banca Múltiple

Cofinancing agencies

Private Sector

  • Banco Nacional de México, S.A. (Citibanamex) (Banamex)
  • Banco Santander, S.A. (Santander Group) (formerly Banco Santander Central Hispano, S.A.)
  • Bank of America Corporation
  • Banorte
  • BBVA México (Formerly BBVA Bancomer)
  • BNP Paribas S.A.
  • Citibank, N.A.
  • Citizens Bank
  • City National Bank
  • Crédit Agricole Corporate and Investment Bank (CACIB) (Crédit Agricole CIB) (Formerly Calyon) (Formerly Crédit Agricole Indosuez (CAI))
  • Credit Industriel et Commercial (CIC)
  • Credit Suisse AG
  • HSBC México S.A.
  • ING Bank N.V.
  • Intesa Sanpaolo S.P.A. (formerly Cariplo/Banca Intesa/BCI)
  • JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A. (Chase Bank, formerly the Chase Manhattan Bank)
  • Mizuho Bank, Ltd.
  • Société Générale S.A. (SocGen or Societe Generale)
  • Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation (SMBC)

State-owned Commercial Banks

  • Bank of China (BOC)
  • Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC)

Receiving agencies

Private Sector

  • CEMEX

Collateral providers

Private Sector

  • CEMEX

Loan desecription

Bank of China Mexico, Bank of China Panama, and ICBC contribute to USD 1.5 billion syndicated term loan to CEMEX for general corporate purposes and debt repayment

Interest typeUnknownMaturity5 years

Collateral

CEMEX Concretos, S.A. de C.V., CEMEX Operaciones México, S.A. de C.V., Cemex Innovation Holding Ltd., and CEMEX Corp make up the loan's guarantor structure

Narrative

Full Description

Project narrative

On October 29, 2021, Mexico's CEMEX secured financial close on a US$3.25 billion sustainability-linked, dollar-denominated, unsecured syndicated financing package. The financing consists of an amortizing term loan for 1.5 billion USD and a committed revolving credit line for 1.75 billion USD (captured via Record ID#97081). Bank of China Mexico, Bank of China Panama, and the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China's Panama branch all contributed an unknown amount to the 1.5 billion USD term loan. BOC Mexico's contribution is captured via Record ID #97078. BOC Panama Branch's contribution is captured via Record ID #110361. ICBC's contribution is captured via Record ID #97080. Both loans carried a five year term and have unknown interest rates. However, being a "sustainability-linked" loan, the annual performance in respect to three metrics referenced in CEMEX's Sustainability-linked Financing Framework may result in a total adjustment of the interest rate margin of plus or minus 5 basis points. These involve reducing net CO2 emissions per ton of cementitious product, increasing power consumption from clean energy sources in cement, and relying more on alternate fuel sources. The first disbursement was registered on November 8, 2021, though it is unknow which of the loans provided this disbursement. The loan proceeds were both to be used primarily for repaying existing debts (refinancing), while about 600 million USD was to be used for general corporate purposes. The new facilities were, per a release from CEMEX, 25 basis points lower on average than that of the previous facilities agreement. The participants in the syndicate for the 1.5 billion USD term loan included the following: Bank of America; BNP Paribas; Banco Nacional de México (member of the Banamex financial group); JPMorgan Chase Bank; BBVA Mexico; Crédit Agricole Corporate & Investment Bank (CACIB); ING Bank, Dublin Branch; Mizuho Bank, New York Branch; Citizens Bank; Intesa Sanpaolo, New York Branch; Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation (SMBC); Bank of China México; Bank of China Limited (Panama Branch); HSBC Mexico; Banco Santander; Société Générale; Banco Mercantil del Norte (member of Banorte); Crédit Industriel et Commercial, London Branch; City National Bank; Credit Suisse, New York branch; and Industrial and Commercial Bank of China Limited, Panama Branch. Bank of America Securities, BNP Paribas, Citigroup Global Markets, and JPMorgan Chase Bank participated as joint bookrunners and joint lead arrangers. ING Capital acted as the sustainability structuring agent for the credit agreement. CEMEX Concretos, CEMEX Operaciones México, Cemex Innovation Holding and CEMEX Corp. acted as guarantors. CEMEX Concretos, S.A. de C.V., CEMEX Operaciones México, S.A. de C.V., Cemex Innovation Holding Ltd., and CEMEX Corp make up the loan's "guarantor structure".

Staff comments

1. There were 21 members of the syndicate that provided the 1.5 billion USD term loan. Because AidData does not know the exact amount each member of the syndicate contributed, it is assumed each made an equal contribution. 1.5 billion USD / 21 members = 71,428,571.43 USD. 2. Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom – United States (New York), with banking and capital markets lawyers; GHR Rechtsanwälte AG (Zurich and Bern) and in-house lawyers advised the borrower. The lenders turned to Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton – United States (New York and Washington, DC) and Galicia Abogados (Mexico City). 3. It is assumed that, when it is reported that the "guarantor structure" is made up of what appear to all be CEMEX subsidiaries -- CEMEX Concretos, S.A. de C.V., CEMEX Operaciones México, S.A. de C.V., Cemex Innovation Holding Ltd., and CEMEX Corp -- the loan is collateralized against some assets held by, or equity in, these subsidiaries. This is due to the phrasing ("guarantor structure"), as well as the fact that non-English languages often use "guarantee" to refer to collateralization.