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                 L A T I N   A M E R I C A

          Thursday, March 26, 2026, Vol. 27, No. 61

                           Headlines



A R G E N T I N A

ARGENTINA: Milei Cheers as INDEC Says Economy Grew 4.4% in 2025


B R A Z I L

JBS SA: USA Workers Enter Strike, Claim Unfair Labor Practices


E C U A D O R

FIMEPCH 5: Fitch Hikes Rating on Series A4 Notes to 'Bsf'


J A M A I C A

JAMAICA: BOJ Moving to Strengthen Payment Services Regulation


P U E R T O   R I C O

ACEVEDO MEDICAL: Hires Sanabria and Associates as Accountant
LIBERTY PUERTO RICO: Lenders Challenge $250MM Diameter Loan


T R I N I D A D   A N D   T O B A G O

TRINIDAD & TOBAGO: Foreign Reserves Slip to US$5.58 Billion

                           - - - - -


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A R G E N T I N A
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ARGENTINA: Milei Cheers as INDEC Says Economy Grew 4.4% in 2025
---------------------------------------------------------------
Buenos Aires Times reports that President Javier Milei mocked his
critics on Friday, March 20, as the INDEC national statistics
bureau reported that economic activity in Argentina expanded by 4.4
percent in 2025.

The year-on-year increase in gross domestic product (GDP) in 2025
was driven by rises in private consumption (7.9 percent), public
consumption (0.2 percent), exports (7.6 percent) and gross fixed
capital formation (16.4 percent), INDEC reported, according to
Buenos Aires Times.

Economic activity contracted by 1.3 percent in 2024.

The report notes that Milei hailed the figure as proof his economic
policies are working.  In a post on social media, he slammed the
"narrative" against his government, attacking crooked "business
cronies" and "corrupt politicians" in a mocking tone. "Data first!"
wrote the head of state, the report relays.

Among the top-performing sectors posting growth last year were
financial intermediation (24.7 percent year-on-year), mining and
quarrying (8.0 percent) and hotels and restaurants (7.4 percent).
At the other end of the scale, fishing contracted a crushing 15.2
percent year-on-year, the report discloses.

"Private consumption was the main component of demand, accounting
for 70 percent of GDP, followed by gross fixed capital formation
(16.0 percent of GDP), exports (15.6 percent of GDP) and public
consumption (14.9 percent of GDP)," the statistics agency said in
its report, Buenos Aires Times says.

The report discloses that Economy Minister Luis Caputo noted that
in the fourth quarter of 2025, GDP rose 0.6 percent in seasonally
adjusted terms compared to the previous quarter and 2.1 percent
year-on-year.  In a post on social media, he observed that "in
constant prices, it reached a historic high in 2025, standing 1.1
percent above the 2022 average (the previous peak)," the report
relays.

In quarter-on-quarter seasonally adjusted terms, exports (up five
percent) and private consumption (up 1.7 percent) increased in the
fourth quarter, the report relays.  Public consumption (down 1.0
percent) and gross fixed capital formation (down 2.8 percent)
declined, the report says.

The report notes that the Centro de Estudios Políticos y
Economicos (CEPEC) economic think tank said "the underlying reading
is clear: the economy is growing," though it noted it lies on
"fragile foundations."

"Momentum depends largely on the external sector, investment is
beginning to show signs of weakness, and not all sectors are
keeping pace," warned the think tank, the report discloses.

"If this trend continues, the start of 2026 could show a scenario
of slower growth," it added.

According to the Central Bank's most recent Market Expectations
Survey (REM), analysts forecast GDP growth of one percent in the
first quarter of 2026 and 0.9 percent in the second, the report
relates.

In the Budget Bill, the government projects annual economic growth
of five percent, the report notes.  "For 2026, participants in the
REM expect, on average, a level of real GDP 3.4 percent higher than
the 2025 average (+0.2 percentage points compared to the previous
survey)," the monetary authority said, the report discloses.

According to estimates by consultancy Orlando Ferreres & Asociados,
economic activity in January 2026 fell one percent year-on-year but
rose 0.4 percent month-on-month, the report relays.

In a second report issued Friday, INDEC said that supermarket sales
- a key indicator for consumption - had fallen 1.5 percent from the
previous month in January, dropping 1.2 percent year-on-year, the
report notes.

INDEC reported midweek that the unemployment rate had risen to 7.5
percent of the economically active population, the report adds.

                       About Argentina

Argentina is a country located mostly in the southern half of
South America. Its capital is Buenos Aires. Javier Milei is the
current president of Argentina after winning the November 19,
2023 general election. He succeeded Alberto Angel Fernandez
in the position.

Argentina has the third largest economy in Latin America.  The
country's economy is an upper middle-income economy for fiscal
year 2019, according to the World Bank.  Historically, however,
its economic performance has been very uneven, with high economic
growth alternating with severe recessions, income maldistribution
and in the recent decades, increasing poverty.

In March 2022, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) approved a
30-month arrangement under an Extended Fund Facility for Argentina
in the amount of SDR 31.914 billion (equivalent to US$44 billion,
or 1000 percent of quota) -- with an approved immediate
disbursement of an equivalent of US$9.65 billion.  Argentina's
IMF-supported program sought to improve public finances and start
to reduce persistent high inflation through a multi-pronged
strategy.

On April 11, 2025, the IMF further approved a 48-month Extended
Fund Facility (EFF) arrangement for Argentina totaling US$20
billion (or 479 percent of quota), with an immediate disbursement
of US$12 billion, and a first review planned for June
2025 with an associated disbursement of about US$2 billion.  The
program is expected to help catalyze additional official
multilateral and bilateral support, and a timely re-access to
international capital markets.

Moody's Ratings on July 17, 2025, upgraded Argentina's
long-term foreign currency and local currency issuer ratings to
Caa1 from Caa3 and changed the outlook to stable from positive.
The upgrade reflects Moody's views that the extensive
liberalization of exchange and (to a lesser extent) capital
controls, alongside a new International Monetary Fund (IMF)
program, support the availability of hard currency liquidity and
ease pressure on external finances. This reduces the likelihood of
a credit event. In January 2025, Moody's raised Argentina's local
currency ceiling  to B3 from Caa1 and the foreign currency ceiling
to Caa1 from Caa3.  

Fitch Ratings, on May 12, 2025, upgraded Argentina's Long-Term
Foreign-Currency and Local-Currency Issuer Default Rating (IDR) to
'CCC+' from 'CCC'. S&P Global Ratings, in February 2025 lowered
its local currency sovereign credit ratings on Argentina to
'SD/SD' from 'CCC/C' and its national scale rating to 'SD' from
'raB+'. DBRS, Inc. upgraded Argentina's Long-Term Foreign and
Local Currency Issuer Ratings to B (low) from CCC in November
2024.




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B R A Z I L
===========

JBS SA: USA Workers Enter Strike, Claim Unfair Labor Practices
--------------------------------------------------------------
Brian Sherrod at cbcnews.com reports that JBS unionized workers
gathered for a press conference to call out the company for unfair
labor practices.  This comes as JBS claims its negotiations with
the workers have been fair, according to cbcnews.com.

Workers say they are tired of long working hours and being
underpaid, the report notes.  This includes workers accusing JBS of
having their pay for their own protective equipment, the report
relays. .

Both groups met, felt negotiations were still unfair, so this led
to the press conference, the report notes.  The union representing
workers has said that after months of negotiations, they were
forced to authorize an unfair labor practice strike against JBS due
to the company's refusal to negotiate fairly with workers and fix
the company's pattern of wage stuff, the report says.  Workers also
say the conditions are not safe, the report discloses.

Many people spoke, including the President of UFCW Local 7,
workers, and even members of Congress, against JBS, the report
relays.

"JBS thinks they can hire a vulnerable workforce and think that
workers can't talk to each other about wages, benefits or working
conditions," Kim Cordova, President, UFCW Local 7, the report
relates. "They're hoping we have a division, but they
underestimated their workers.  Their workers are smart.   They are
strong. They are hard workers.  They deserve dignity, and they
deserve respect," he added.

The report notes that JBS responded in part, "We provide PPE to all
team members at no cost to them.  Our policy is as long, and the
team members are only responsible for paying for personal
protective equipment if the equipment is lost or maliciously
damaged."

Union members say they are willing to be back up with the company
to negotiate for a better deal, the report relays.  They say they
will not be returning to work until they feel that conditions are
fair, the report adds.

                    About JBS S.A.

JBS S.A. is a Brazilian company that is a large meat processing
enterprise, producing factory processed beef, chicken, salmon,
pork, and also selling by-products from the processing of these
meats.  It is headquartered in Sao Paulo.  It was founded in 1953
in Anapolis, Goias.

As reported in the Troubled Company Reporter-Latin America in
August 2021, S&P Global Ratings revised the global scale outlook
on JBS S.A. (JBS) and its fully owned subsidiary JBS USA Lux S.A.
(JBS USA) to positive from stable and affirmed its 'BB+' issuer
credit rating. The recovery expectations remain unchanged, and S&P
affirmed the 'BB+' ratings on the senior unsecured notes and the
'BBB' ratings on the secured term loans.

  






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E C U A D O R
=============

FIMEPCH 5: Fitch Hikes Rating on Series A4 Notes to 'Bsf'
---------------------------------------------------------
Fitch Ratings has upgraded the series A notes issued by Fideicomiso
Mercantil Titularizacion Hipotecaria de Banco Pichincha 5 (FIMEPCH
5) to 'Bsf' from 'CCC+sf', following the upgrade on the
counterparty, Banco Pichincha C.A. y Subsidiarias, to 'B' from
'CCC+'. Fitch has also affirmed the IMS Ecuadorian Mortgage 2021-1
Trust certificates at 'AA+sf'. The Rating Outlook is Stable for
both transactions.

   Entity/Debt                    Rating           Prior
   -----------                    ------           -----
IMS Ecuadorian
Mortgage 2021-1 Trust

   2021-1 44970EAA1            LT AA+sf Affirmed   AA+sf

Fideicomiso Mercantil
Titularizacion Hipotecaria
de Banco Pichincha 5

   A4                          LT Bsf   Upgrade    CCC+sf

KEY RATING DRIVERS

FIMEPCH 5

Rating Capped at Transaction Account Bank: The series A notes are
capped at the rating of the Transaction Account Bank provider
(currently Banco Pichincha; rated 'B'/Outlook Stable). For the
'Bsf' rating category, the Transaction Account Bank must have at
least the same rating as the notes, according to Fitch's
"Structured Finance and Covered Bonds Rating Criteria." However, in
this case, the eligible bank has been defined as an entity with a
rating equal to or a maximum of one notch below Ecuador's 'B-'
sovereign rating, which constrains the ratings.

Stable Pool Characteristics: Pool characteristics have remained
similar since issuance. Based on the new assumptions, given the
sovereign upgrade to 'B-' from 'CCC+', and the resulting increase
in the structured finance cap to 'B+' from 'B', Fitch performed an
updated analysis. Using the January 2026 cut-off, the weighted
average foreclosure frequency at 'Bsf' is 20.4%, including a
performance adjustment of 0.8, and the weighted average loss given
default is 19.2%.

These assumptions reflect the stability of the assets' main
characteristics: an average original loan-to-value ratio of 62.5%,
an average original term of 18 years, an average remaining term of
11 years, and 30.6% of the performing portfolio concentrated in
properties valued at 300 minimum wages or less at origin. As of
January 2026, on a cumulative basis, just 2.7% of loans reached 180
dpd, while Fitch's initial assumption for the same period was 5.3%.
Only 27 loans (1%) have been restructured.

Adequate Capital Structure Supports Ratings: The series A notes
benefit from a sequential pay structure, where their target
amortization payments are senior to interest and principal payments
on the series B notes. Series A also benefits from a credit
enhancement (CE) of 30.3% as of January 2026, up from 28.7% in
November 2025, and an interest reserve account equal to 3x the next
interest payment. In addition, series A benefits from excess spread
from its net weighted average coupon feature, but Fitch does not
consider this variable. Fitch ran its cash flow analysis, and the
results are consistent with 'Bsf', reflecting the cap on the
transaction account bank provider.

Operational Risk Mitigated: Pursuant to the servicer agreement,
Banco Pichincha performs the role of primary servicer. Fitch has
reviewed Banco Pichincha's systems and procedures and is satisfied
with its servicing capabilities. Additionally, Corporacion de
Desarrollo de Mercado Secundario de Hipotecas CTH S.A. (CTH) has
been designated as master and back-up servicer, mitigating the
exposure to operational risk.

IMS Ecuadorian Mortgage 2021-1 Trust

DFC Credit Quality Supports Rating: The rating assigned to the
2021-1 certificates is commensurate with the guarantor's credit
quality. The DFC's credit quality is directly linked to the U.S.
sovereign rating (AA+/F1+/Stable), as guarantees issued by and
obligations of the DFC are backed by the full faith and credit of
the U.S. government, pursuant to the Foreign Assistance Act of
1969.

Reliance on DFC Guaranty: Fitch assumes the payment on the notes
will rely on the DFC guaranty. Through this guaranty the DFC will
unconditionally and irrevocably guarantee the receipt of proceeds
from the underlying notes in an amount sufficient to cover timely
scheduled interest amounts (currently A4 interest rate minus trust
expenses and 3.4%) and the ultimate principal amount on the
certificates.

The DFC guaranty effectively protects noteholders, taking into
consideration the scope of the guaranty, the claim process and the
timing required for the guarantor to disburse the funds to the
issuer.

Ample Liquidity: The transaction benefits from liquidity, in the
form of a five-day buffer between payment dates on the underlying
notes and payment dates on the certificates. Additionally, the
certificates benefit from a three-month debt service reserve
account at the underlying note level and a guaranty fee reserve
account that was funded at transaction closing. This will be
utilized throughout the life of the certificates to ensure the
guaranty fee due to the guarantor is paid in a timely manner.

Fitch considers this sufficient to keep debt service current on the
guaranteed certificates until funds are received under a DFC
Guaranty claim and that the guaranty will not terminate as a result
of a failure to pay the guaranty fee.

RATING SENSITIVITIES

Factors that Could, Individually or Collectively, Lead to Negative
Rating Action/Downgrade

For the RMBS transaction, the ratings are sensitive to the
Ecuadorian sovereign's country ceiling and Banco Pichincha's credit
quality as the transaction account bank. A downgrade of Ecuador's
Country Ceiling to levels below the transaction's current rating or
a downgrade of Banco Pichincha would result in a downgrade of the
series A notes. Given the collateral's performance and high OC
levels, Fitch does not expect negative rating actions due to asset
performance.

For IMS Ecuadorian Mortgage 2021-1 Trust, the certificates' rating
is directly linked to the DFC's credit quality as the guarantor.
The DFC's credit quality is directly linked to the U.S. sovereign
rating, as guarantees issued by and obligations of DFC are backed
by the full faith and credit of the U.S. government, pursuant to
the Foreign Assistance Act of 1969. The rating could be downgraded
if the U.S. sovereign rating is downgraded.

Factors that Could, Individually or Collectively, Lead to Positive
Rating Action/Upgrade

The ratings assigned to the class A notes issued by FIMEPCH 5 are
sensitive to the credit quality of the Ecuadorian sovereign,
particularly its country ceiling, as well as to the credit quality
of Banco Pichincha (acting as the transaction account bank holder).
An upgrade of Banco Pichincha, or its replacement by another entity
with a higher rating, could result in an upgrade of the series A
notes.

For IMS Ecuadorian Mortgage 2021-1 Trust, the certificates could be
upgraded if Fitch upgrades the U.S. sovereign rating, which could
improve DFC's credit quality.

USE OF THIRD PARTY DUE DILIGENCE PURSUANT TO SEC RULE 17G -10

Form ABS Due Diligence-15E was not provided to, or reviewed by,
Fitch in relation to this rating action.

DATA ADEQUACY

The data used in the analysis are considered sufficient and robust
to the ratings assigned.

PUBLIC RATINGS WITH CREDIT LINKAGE TO OTHER RATINGS

The credit quality of the Series A notes is currently capped at and
driven by the rating of the Transaction Account Bank, Banco
Pichincha, as measured by its Long-Term IDR. For IMS Ecuadorian
Mortgage 2021-1 Trust, the certificates' rating is directly linked
to the credit quality of DFC.

ESG Considerations

The highest level of ESG credit relevance is a score of '3', unless
otherwise disclosed in this section. A score of '3' means ESG
issues are credit-neutral or have only a minimal credit impact on
the entity, either due to their nature or the way in which they are
being managed by the entity. Fitch's ESG Relevance Scores are not
inputs in the rating process; they are an observation on the
relevance and materiality of ESG factors in the rating decision.



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J A M A I C A
=============

JAMAICA: BOJ Moving to Strengthen Payment Services Regulation
-------------------------------------------------------------
David Rose at Jamaica Observer reports that the Bank of Jamaica is
moving to significantly deepen its control over the country's
financial system, advancing a series of legislative changes that
will tighten regulation of payments, remittances and credit unions
as it prepares for a major shift in its role.

While the central bank already supervises key parts of the
financial system, the changes outlined in its 2025 annual report
point to something more far-reaching -- a move to formalise, expand
and enforce its authority across a broader set of financial
activities, closing gaps that have long existed in Jamaica's
regulatory framework, according to Jamaica Observer.

That push is anchored in proposed amendments to the Payment
Clearing and Settlement Act (PCSA) which would establish a formal
licensing regime for payment service providers (PSPs) -- the
companies behind mobile payments, merchant transactions and digital
transfers, the report notes.

"During November 2025 the bank submitted comments on the fifth
draft of the proposed legislation," the central bank said in its
annual report, noting that the amendments would also introduce
offences and enforcement provisions applicable to operators and
participants in financial market infrastructure, the report
relays.

The shift would move the payments space away from a framework
largely guided by policy and oversight into one defined by statute,
with clearer rules on who can operate and how those entities are
supervised, the report notes.

The move also comes as the central bank continues to upgrade the
country's payment infrastructure, including the migration of its
real-time settlement system to international ISO 20022 standards
and the expansion of its Jam-Dex digital currency platform, the
report discloses.

At the same time, the central bank is seeking to strengthen its
authority over the money services business (MSB) sector, which
includes remittance providers, through amendments to the BOJ Act,
the report says.

Under the proposed changes the bank would gain enhanced powers to
act against unlicensed operators — including the ability to
pursue offences wherein entities misrepresent themselves as
authorised providers, and obtaining search warrants where it
suspects illegal activity, the report relays.

"Once implemented, the amended Act will strengthen the legal
framework governing MSBs and enhance the statutory oversight of the
sector, thereby facilitating full compliance with Financial Action
Task Force (FATF) Recommendation 14," the BOJ said, the report
notes.

The report relays that further changes are also being contemplated
for the credit union sector.  Draft legislation -- including
amendments to the Co-operative Societies Act and a proposed Credit
Unions (Special Provisions) Bill -- would see the BOJ assume
supervisory responsibility for these institutions, the report
says.

                      About Jamaica

Jamaica is an island country situated in the Caribbean Sea.
Jamaica
is an upper-middle income country with an economy heavily
dependent
on tourism.  Other major sectors of the Jamaican economy include
agriculture, mining, manufacturing, petroleum refining, financial
and insurance services.

On Feb. 21, 2025, Fitch Ratings affirmed Jamaica's Long-Term
Foreign-Currency Issuer Default Rating (IDR) at 'BB-', with a
positive rating outlook.  In October 2023, Moody's upgraded the
Government of Jamaica's long-term issuer and senior unsecured
ratings to B1 from B2, and senior unsecured shelf rating to (P)B1
from (P)B2.  The outlook has been changed to positive from stable.
In September 2024, S&P affirmed 'BB-/B' longterm foreign and local
currency sovereign credit ratings on Jamaica and revised outlook
to
positive.   




=====================
P U E R T O   R I C O
=====================

ACEVEDO MEDICAL: Hires Sanabria and Associates as Accountant
------------------------------------------------------------
Acevedo Medical Center LLC seeks approval from the U.S. Bankruptcy
Court for the District of Puerto Rico to hire Sanabria and
Associates LLC as accountants.

The firm will render these services:

     a. assist in the preparation of financial information required
for the bankruptcy filing;

     b. assist in organizing accounting records to comply with
Bankruptcy reporting requirements and assist in documenting the
reorganization plan;

     c. prepare monthly operating reports, necessary tax returns;
and

     d. assist the Debtor in all matters related to court
instructions, transactions, and or information requests of an
accounting or financial nature.

The firm's hourly rates are:

     Ramon J. Sanabria     $225
     Senior Accountant     $125
     Staff Accountant       $75

Ramon J. Sanabria, CPA of Sanabria and Associates LLC assured the
court that his firm is a "disinterested person" within the meaning
of 11 U.S.C. Sec. 101(14).

The firm can be reached through:

     Ramon J. Sanabria, CPA
     Sanabria and Associates LLC
     122 Padial Street
     Caguas, PR 00725
     Tel: (787) 473-7062

        About Acevedo Medical Center

Acevedo Medical Center LLC filed its voluntary petition for relief
under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code (Bankr. D.P.R. Case No.
26-00406) on February 2, 2026, listing $500,001 to $1 million in
both assets and liabilities.

Judge Maria De Los Angeles Gonzalez presides over the case.

Carmen D. Conde Torres, Esq. at C. Conde & Associates serves as the
Debtor's counsel.


LIBERTY PUERTO RICO: Lenders Challenge $250MM Diameter Loan
-----------------------------------------------------------
The Wall Street Journal reports that major creditors of Liberty
Puerto Rico sued its parent company to try to unwind a $250 million
loan from Diameter Capital Partners that subordinated its other
debt obligations into a junior position.

GoldenTree Asset Management and Arini Capital Management alleged in
their complaint that Liberty Puerto Rico breached its credit
agreement not to transfer 'all or substantially all' assets by
dropping its network and spectrum assets into a new subsidiary last
year to serve as collateral for the Diameter loan, according to The
Wall Street Journal.

Liberty Puerto Rico is a telecommunications company that offers
internet, television, and wireless services in Puerto Rico.



=====================================
T R I N I D A D   A N D   T O B A G O
=====================================

TRINIDAD & TOBAGO: Foreign Reserves Slip to US$5.58 Billion
-----------------------------------------------------------
Trinidad and Tobago Guardian reports that Trinidad and Tobago's net
official foreign reserves totalled US$5.580 billion at the end of
February 2026, a decrease of US$135 million or 2.36 per cent from
January 2026, when the reserves amounted to US$5.715 billion,
according to data from the Central Bank website.

T&T's net official foreign reserves plunged to a near 20-year low
at the end of August last year, when the Central Bank recorded its
holdings of foreign exchange at US$4.61 billion, just above the
US$4.53 billion reported in March 2006, according to Trinidad and
Tobago Guardian .

The decline in T&T's foreign reserves to a near 20-year low in
August 2025, preceded by less than a month the announcement by S&P
Global Ratings on September 25, 2025, that it was revising the
country's outlook from stable to negative, while maintaining the
long-term sovereign credit rating at "BBB-" (investment grade), the
report notes.

"The negative outlook reflects the possibility of a downgrade
absent meaningful and timely steps to strengthen the sustainability
of public finances, ensure balanced economic growth, and maintain
the country's strong external profile," S&P Global Ratings said in
its news release announcing the ratings decision, the report
relays.

S&P said the negative outlook reflected its view that there is at
least a one-in-three chance that it could lower the ratings over
the next six to 24 months, the report says.

"The country's fiscal and external buffers have been gradually
weakening over time and its long-term economic growth has been low.
Despite many efforts, there has been only limited progress by
previous administrations in diversifying the economy, leaving it
vulnerable to volatile energy prices while output from the oil and
gas sector has recently declined," said the rating agency, the
report notes.

S&P Global Ratings also referred to its concerns over declining
energy production and weak fiscal and external buffers, the report
discloses.

On December 12, 2025, the other major rating agency, Moody's, also
revised downward its outlook on T&T from stable to negative, citing
that the change in the outlook "reflects rising external
vulnerability, as liquid foreign exchange reserves have fallen by
24 per cent over the past year to US$3.2 billion, as of August
2025." The rating agency defined liquid reserves as gross reserves,
excluding gold and special drawing rights, the report says.

Taking issue with what he said was Moody's narrow definition of
T&T's foreign exchange reserves, Minister of Finance Davendranath
Tancoo said, "The decline in Moody's narrow definition of foreign
exchange reserves happened to be the contributing factor in their
negative outlook. Their definition of foreign exchange reserves not
only excludes gold and Special Drawing Rights, but, more
critically, ignores all the significant foreign currency assets
managed by other economic agents," including the Heritage and
Stabilisation Fund, the report adds.





                           *********


S U B S C R I P T I O N   I N F O R M A T I O N

Troubled Company Reporter-Latin America is a daily newsletter
co-published by Bankruptcy Creditors' Service, Inc., Fairless
Hills, Pennsylvania, USA, and Beard Group, Inc., Washington, D.C.,
USA, Marites O. Claro, Joy A. Agravante, Rousel Elaine T.
Fernandez, Julie Anne L. Toledo, Ivy B. Magdadaro, and Peter A.
Chapman, Editors.

Copyright 2026.  All rights reserved.  ISSN 1529-2746.

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Information contained herein is obtained from sources believed to
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