Venezuelan Daily Brief

Published in association with The DVA Group and The Selinger Group, the Venezuelan Daily Brief provides bi-weekly summaries of key news items affecting bulk commodities and the general business environment in Venezuela.

Showing posts with label Datanálisis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Datanálisis. Show all posts

Friday, September 12, 2014

September 12, 2014

International Trade

Venezuela extends night closure of Colombia border to stop smuggling
Venezuela says it will extend an overnight closure of its border with neighboring Colombia for another three months in a campaign to stop widespread fuel and food smuggling. The measures to stop traffic crossing between 10 p.m. and 5 a.m., and limit the movement of cargo vehicles during the day, were introduced in mid-August to combat the lucrative business in smuggling heavily subsidized Venezuelan products. "We are going to pursue and punish smugglers with double severity," President Nicolas Maduro said, announcing the three-month extension. "They are looting the republic." (Reuters, http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/09/12/us-venezuela-colombia-idUSKBN0H62ND20140912)

MELIÁ planning five hotels in Venezuela
MELIÁ Hotel International will be managing five new hotels in Venezuela under the Innside By Melia brand in the coming years, the company announced. The hotels will be developed together with investor Franco Biocchi Zurita. “This framework agreement is a major landmark in the consolidation of the Innside brand as a market leader for urban hotels in cities with strong growth and development potential in Latin America, while also strengthening our strategic alliance with Franco Biocchi to develop extraordinary and successful hotel projects in Venezuela,” said Gabriel Escarrer, CEO of MELIÁ Hotels International. Melia said the first hotel would be the Innside Punto Fijo Hotel in the state of Falcon, which is slated to open in 2016. (Caribbean Journal, http://www.caribjournal.com/2014/09/11/melia-planning-five-hotels-in-venezuela/)


Oil & Energy

PDVSA seeks bids for CITGO in potential US$ 10 billion deal
Venezuela's state-run oil company PDVSA is seeking preliminary offers for its U.S. unit CITGO Petroleum Corp by the end of September a deal that could fetch up to US$ 10 billion, according to two people familiar with the matter. Venezuela is selling CITGO in part due to a cash crunch stemming from repaying debts to Beijing with oil, rather than selling the crude to generate revenue, analysts say. The government denies a cash-flow problem exists. Within President Nicolas Maduro's government, the potential sale is controversial and seen as a privatization that would contradict years of socialist policies, including a nationalization of the oil industry in 2006 and 2007. Investment bank Lazard Ltd, which is running the sale process for CITGO on behalf of PDVSA, has sent offering materials to potential buyers, the people said in recent days, asking not to be named because the matter is not public. PDVSA also has a 50% stake in the Chalmette refinery in Louisiana alongside Exxon Mobil Corp, which owns the remainder. The Venezuelan oil company has tapped Deutsche Bank separately to explore a sale of its stake in that refinery. A sale, if it were to come to fruition, would be Venezuela's biggest pullback ever from the U.S. refining market. (Reuters, http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/09/09/us-refineries-citgo-pete-sale-idUSKBN0H428720140909)


Commodities

Steel: Venezuela’s showcase city becomes symbol of economic meltdown
Long before Hugo Chávez launched his socialist revolution, government planners came to Ciudad Guayana on Venezuela’s eastern frontier, where the Orinoco and Caroni rivers converge, and envisioned an industrial workers’ paradise. A half-century later and 15 years after Chávez came to power, Ciudad Guayana’s factories are crippled, starved for investment and riled by labor disputes. The workers’ standoff with President Nicolás Maduro – Chávez’s successor and a former union leader himself – has turned Ciudad Guayana into a crucial battleground for the socialist government as it faces economic meltdown and political infighting. When it was founded, Ciudad Guayana and its state-run heavy industries were Venezuela’s best hope for breaking the country’s overwhelming dependence on crude oil exports. It had the raw materials on hand: iron ore, bauxite and gold; timber and farmland; and huge rivers to supply cheap hydropower for smelters and factories.  The steelmaking company at the core of the Ciudad Guayana project, SIDOR, produced a record 4.3m tons before it was nationalized by Chávez in 2008. Today, most of its furnaces sit cold, deprived of raw materials, new technology and reliable labor. The last contract for its 14,000 steelworkers expired four years ago. National Assembly president Diosdado Cabello – Venezuela’s second-most-powerful figure after Maduro – has denounced union adversaries at SIDOR as “mafias” in the service of US “imperialism”, offending many of the workers who consider themselves Chávez loyalists and true patriots. In private, government officials say SIDOR will need to produce 250,000 ton of steel a month just to break even. Its current output is closer to 70,000 tons. Closing the gap will require hundreds of millions in new investments. One official close to the SIDOR negotiations who was not authorized to speak publicly said it makes little sense for Venezuela to sink more money into inefficient steelmaking. “We could let SIDOR die and import all the steel we need,” he said. “And there would still be enough to pay the workers’ salaries.” (The Guardian, http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/sep/09/venezuela-maduro-labour-dispute-ciudad-guayana)

Detergent plant is paralyzed for lack of supplies
A powdered detergent plant owned by Alimentos POLAR has been paralyzed for the past 15 days for lack of supplies. Some 400 workers at the plant were on protest to ask the government to release a sodium sulfate load that has been held up at Puerto Cabello since August 22nd. More in Spanish: (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/140910/planta-de-detergentes-de-polar-esta-parada-por-falta-de-insumos)

Toyota’s plant in Cumaná remains closed by workers one week after they began a conflict with the assembler’s board of directors, due to differences over salary raises and the elimination of quota assignments to workers to purchase cars at cost price. (Veneconomy, http://www.veneconomy.com/site/index.asp?ids=44&idt=41019&idc=3)


Economy & Finance

Maduro says Venezuela can pay debt, blasts default fears, orders legal action against economists
President Nicolas Maduro said Venezuela could meet all its obligations to bondholders, as he sought to quell market fears that the Socialist-run country may opt to default when US$ 5 billion of its foreign debt falls due for repayment next month. Fears of a possible default heightened, with bond yields spiking, after the publication of an article by a former planning minister and a pro-opposition economist that suggested an orderly default could ultimately help Venezuela's slumping economy. "We're prepared to meet our international obligations in their entirety," Maduro declared on Wednesday night. "Down to the last dollar." He said Harvard economist Ricardo Hausmann - who recently wrote the government should prioritize its debt to the Venezuelan people above international bond holders - is a "bandit" and added: "I have ordered the Solicitor and spoken to the Prosecutor so that we can start action against you..key advisor to all those groups that want to harm Venezuela...and work as financial hit men for those forces at the IMF and oligarchies" (Reuters, http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/09/11/us-venezuela-bonds-idUSKBN0H60DF20140911; Bloomberg, http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-09-11/venezuela-bonds-rally-on-maduro-pledge-to-pay-every-last-dollar.html; and Noticiero Digital: http://www.noticierodigital.com/2014/09/maduro-acuso-al-economista-ricardo-hausmann-de-bandido-y-sicario-financiero/)

Specter of default looms over Venezuela despite oil reserves
Venezuela is struggling to meet its international bond payments, raising the specter of an Argentine-style default despite the country’s massive oil reserves. Yields on Venezuelan bonds, the third-largest constituent of JPMorgan’s global emerging bond index, have risen since Caracas put CITGO, the country’s US refining operation, up for sale and scrambled to reassure investors it can refinance US$ 7 billion coming due this year on its more than US$ 80 billion of sovereign debt. A Venezuelan default could be widely felt. The country accounts for 7% of emerging market benchmarks, meaning a default could force redemptions of other investments by passive index-tracking funds. As Morgan Stanley wrote in a research report late last year: “Venezuela may affect your . . . portfolio, even if you don’t own it.” Until recently, bond investors drew comfort from Venezuela’s US$ 85 billion annual oil exports. But confidence was shaken this week as yields on short-dated bonds issued by PDVSA, the state owned oil company, shot above 25%. Venezuelan credit default swaps also rose to levels comparable to Argentina. “The [Venezuelan] government is clearly exploring any and all options to generate additional cash in order to stay afloat, with an eye on short term fixes,” comments Risa Grais-Targow, Latin America analyst at Eurasia, the risk consultancy. Venezuela’s public finances certainly look tight. Despite US$ 21 billion of reserves, less than US$ 3 billion of these are liquid. The government also has about US$ 9 billion in obscure off-budget funds, plus eventual proceeds from CITGO’s sale. “The difference between Argentina defaulting and Venezuela is that Argentina had nothing to lose,” says Luis Vicente León OF DATANALISIS, a local pollster. “By contrast, Venezuela has substantial foreign assets under risk – from CITGO, to oil shipments, to PDVSA receivables . . . That makes default risk devastating.” On Wednesday, BNP Paribas recommended buying Venezuelan bonds. Other investment banks also said Venezuela had enough funds to meet import needs and short-term debt payments, although to continue doing so it needed to embrace politically costly reforms. “I don’t think Venezuela is going to default, although the probability has greatly increased,” said Russ Dallen of Caracas Capital Markets. “It is a case of the ‘devil you know versus the devil you don’t’. And the problem is we don’t know.” (Financial Times, http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/279da4e8-39b1-11e4-83c4-00144feabdc0.html#axzz3D2HGtX3o) 

Venezuelan bonds recover slightly
Venezuelan bonds value recovered slightly following President Nicolás Maduro's remarks stating that the country is capable of honoring its international debts which slightly exceed US$ 5 billion in bonds maturing next month.
Venezuelan bonds plummeted last week amid investors' concerns about short supply of dollars in the country, which has hit its economic variables and worsened shortages of staples. However, President Maduro said on Wednesday that his administration was prepared to meet its foreign liabilities. "Despite greater risk of non-payment to domestic sectors, namely airlines, automobile, pharmaceutical, and food, (Venezuelan) authorities will continue to honor their financial debt and international obligations," says Diego Moya-Ocampos, analyst at IHS, referring to the multi-million outstanding debt caused by delays in foreign currency supply. (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/140911/venezuelan-bonds-recover-on-thursday)

The Central Bank (BCV) corrected the annualized inflation rate on Wednesday, a day after it had presented the figures, using the new “methodology.” Now, inflation in June was 4.4%, 4.1% in July and 3.9% in August for an annualized rate of 62.2% and not 60.5% as initially reported between June 2013 and June 2014. (Veneconomy, http://www.veneconomy.com/site/index.asp?ids=44&idt=41009&idc=2; El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/140910/central-bank-of-venezuela-revises-down-inflation-figure; http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/140910/capriles-inflation-sets-record-high-even-with-fabricated-numbers; http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/140911/utility-rates-in-venezuela-up-55-in-12-months; Bloomberg, http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-09-09/venezuelan-inflation-slows-for-third-consecutive-month-in-august.html)

Retailers report sales plunged 52% in the second quarter
According to a poll conducted by the National Trade and Services Council (CONSECOMERCIO) up to 52.2% of retailers report sales plummeted in the second quarter, "Rather than improve, the numbers have slipped," says CONSECOMERCIO's president, Mauricio Tancredi. He says high inflation, insecurity, low stocks, and price regulations are the main obstacles facing the commercial sector. (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/140911/retailers-claim-sales-plunged-52-in-the-second-quarter)

Food inflation climbs 210% in 24 months in Venezuela
The government has implemented a price regulation policy for many products, managed a large network of agro-industrial companies, and held thousands of hectares in the agricultural sectors. However, their results are below the expectations. According to figures disclosed by the Central Bank (BCV), the average price of food and non-alcoholic beverages skyrocketed 210% in August 2012 - August 2014. (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/140911/food-inflation-climbs-210-in-24-months-in-venezuela)

DATÁNALISIS: 84% describe the current economic situation as negative
DATANALISIS Director Luis Vicente Leon reports that 84% of all Venezuelans consider the current economic situation is negative and 53% doubt this government is able to solve economic problems. More in Spanish: (El Mundo, http://www.elmundo.com.ve/noticias/economia/politicas-publicas/datanalisis--84--de-la-poblacion-considera-negativ.aspx#ixzz3D0YXsVIQ)


Politics

Maduro claims his regime is set to win 2015 legislative elections
President Nicolás Maduro claims his United Socialist Party (PSUV) is getting ready for "a great victory" in parliamentary elections set for October 2015 to teach those have "sabotaged the economy" a "lesson". He added that "the shakeup is only beginning... we are going after the remainder of the bourgeois state". More in Spanish: (Infolatam)

Opposition leader Leopoldo Lopez on trial September 22
One of Venezuela's main opposition leaders, Leopoldo Lopez, again appeared in court in Caracas and the next hearing has been set for September 22nd. He is accused of inciting violence during anti-government demonstrations earlier this year and has been in custody since 18 February, when he handed himself in to the authorities. He denies all the charges. Dozens of people gathered outside the courthouse to demand his release. The prosecution was expected to present more evidence against him. Lopez, who is the head of the Popular Will Party, has accused the government of President Nicolas Maduro of jailing Venezuelans for seeking democratic change. Other opposition activists detained during the protests earlier this year have also appeared in court in Caracas. The authorities accuse Lopez of inciting violence and encouraging demonstrators to vandalize government buildings. Only two of the four witnesses summoned for this fourth hearing showed up and according to López’ defense they “irrefutably” determined there was no arson at the Attorney General’s Office building last February 12 which is one of the charges against Voluntad Popular leader and the four students, Marco Coello, Christian Holdack, Ángel González and Demian Martin. (BBC, http://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-29151975?utm_source=Sailthru&utm_medium=email&utm_term=%2AMorning%20Brief&utm_campaign=2014_MorningBrief-%20RD%20PROMO%209.11.14; Veneconomy, http://www.veneconomy.com/site/index.asp?ids=44&idt=41011&idc=1; El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/140911/leopoldo-lopezs-next-hearing-scheduled-for-september-22; Latin American Herald Tribune, http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=2351650&CategoryId=10717)

US is concerned over the "lack of due process" for opposition leaders here
US State Department spokesperson Marie Harf referred to opposition leaders imprisoned after protests began in February, including Leopoldo López, and mayors Enzo Scarano and Daniel Ceballos, saying: "The US is deeply concerned by the lack of due process and guarantees in procedures against those detained over protests in Venezuela". More in Spanish: (Diario 2001, http://www.2001.com.ve/en-el-mundo/eeuu-preocupado-por-la--falta-de-debido-proceso--a-opositores-en-venezuela.html)

BLOOMBERG View: Colombia does Venezuela's dirty work
How to parse Colombia's decision to hand over two young Venezuelan fugitive dissidents to the Bolivarian thought police? One theory: To seal a peace deal with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), Juan Manuel Santos, Colombia's president, is again pandering to the autocrat next door. It's no secret that Venezuela has long been in the corner of the Colombian insurgents, who have been waging terror and mayhem against Colombia’s government for the last half-century, often with a wink and a nod from their Venezuelan patrons. That toxic bond had estranged Colombia and Venezuela for most of the previous decade, with the hawkish Alvaro Uribe pitted against the chief Andean tub-thumper, Hugo Chavez. Since Santos was first elected in 2010, he has gone out of his way to end the Andean Cold War, infuriating Uribe, many Colombians, and the entire Venezuelan opposition besides. Exhibit A: his 2011 extradition of suspected Venezuelan drug-trafficker, Walid Makled, then in a Colombian jail. Not to the U.S., where Makled was wanted for a farrago of felonies, from running cocaine to abetting the FARC, but to Venezuela, where his trial has yet to be concluded. Two years on, peace is still elusive, but Santos has kept courting the Chavistas. Gabriel Valles, aged 27, and Lorent Saleh, 26, are members of an organization protesting the government of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, but they aren't exactly hardened criminals, much less game changers in the peace parley. Both had slipped over the border to evade the Venezuelan courts, where they face charges of troublemaking during antigovernment street protests, including "inciting public disorder," spreading "false information," and a Bolivarian gem called "public uncertainty," which is Chavista-speak for anything their men in red want it to be. Since they were first hauled into Venezuelan court, they'd been under orders to report every few weeks to the police and were barred from traveling abroad. So effectively, their offense was skipping probation. Venezuela hadn't even issued an extradition request when Colombia handed the two over to Venezuelan intelligence last week. More tellingly, perhaps, Saleh and Valles were reported to be close to former president Uribe, Santos's archenemy, and had criticized the Santos administration in speeches, adding a note of potential political payback to the surrender. (Bloomberg, http://www.bloombergview.com/articles/2014-09-11/colombia-does-venezuela-s-dirty-work)

Brownfield slams Venezuela's lack of cooperation on narcotics
US Assistant Secretary of State of the Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs William Brownfield says drug traffic through Venezuela has increased considerable due to lack of cooperation with the US and other countries in the Hemisphere. "When I arrived in Venezuela as Ambassador in 2004 we had some sort of cooperation....when I left almost all cooperation had ended. This creates an opportunity for drug traffic and creates the problem we now have". More in Spanish: (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/140910/brownfield-critica-la-no-colaboracion-del-pais-en-drogas)

Venezuela gains support to sit on the UN Security Council
According to Amín Cruz, a Dominican Republic diplomat who chaired a closed door meeting of Latin America and Caribbean representatives at the UN on July 23rd, the decision was taken there to support Venezuela's candidacy to a term on the UN Security Council. The last time Venezuela attempted to gain a seat on the Council - in 2006 - it was torpedoed by the US, which has not spoken on the issue at this time. More in Spanish: (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/140912/venezuela-aseguro-apoyo-regional-al-consejo-de-seguridad)



The following brief is a synthesis of the news as reported by a variety of media sources. As such, the views and opinions expressed do not necessarily reflect those of Duarte Vivas & Asociados and The Selinger Group.

Friday, July 27, 2012

July 27th, 2012


Economics & Finance

Exchange controls to remain despite MERCOSUR entry
President Hugo Chávez says Venezuela will continue to have full freedom to set its monetary, exchange and tax policy upon its entry into the Common Market of the South (MERCOSUR). After a meeting with Brazilian senior authorities, he emphasized that the trade bloc is not a supra-national scheme set to impose domestic policy related issues. "We have full freedom to keep exchange control, Cadivi (Foreign Exchange Administration Board) and mechanisms, such as Aladi (Latin American Integration Association) and many other mechanisms," he remarked. (El Universal, 07-26-2012; http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/120726/exchange-control-in-force-despite-mercosur)

Venezuela's socialist model clashes with MERCOSUR, according to Carlos Larrazabal, President of the National Council of Industries (CONINDUSTRIA). "Many restrictions placed by MERCOSUR totally contradict socialist guidelines and policies" established in the First National Socialist Plan for 2007-2013, he says. More in Spanish: (El Universal, 07-27-2012; http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/120727/modelo-economico-de-venezuela-choca-con-el-mercosur)

Shortage is in the lowest level
According to the DATANALISIS polling firm, the level of food shortages was at its lowest level this year dropping 1.2 percentage points over the previous survey to reach 13.8%. According to measurements, no product was in the serious shortage category (over 40%) and nine items were placed in the level of scarcity significant (between 11% and 40%). More in Spanish: (Últimas Noticias, 07-23-2012; http://www.ultimasnoticias.com.ve/noticias/actualidad/economia/desabastecimiento-esta-en-el-nivel-mas-bajo.aspx)

"The priority is to have food, even if it is imported", says General Carlos Osorio, Minister for Nutrition, who also claims the government has over 22,000 sales outlets throughout the country, and serves over 16 million people. More in Spanish: (El Universal, 07-27-2012; http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/120727/la-prioridad-es-que-haya-alimentos-asi-sean-importados)

Venezuela hit with U$D 600 million of new arbitration claims
The administration of President Hugo Chavez faces new demands for compensation worth at least U$D 600 million at the World Bank after companies rushed to present their claims before the South American nation pulled out of the arbitration system. Spain’s Valle Verde Sociedad Financiera SL and Barbados- based companies Blue Bank International & Trust Ltd and Transban Investment Corp. filed separate claims to the bank’s International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes, said DLA Piper LLP, the law firm representing the investment firms. Miami-based DLA Piper partner Pedro Martinez-Fraga says: “The decision to file, sometimes it’s precipitated by knowing that you won’t have that remedy anymore.” (Bloomberg, 07-26-2012; http://www.businessweek.com/news/2012-07-26/venezuela-hit-with-600-million-of-new-arbitration-claims)




Commodities

PDVSA loses U$D 2.19 billion in gasoline subsidies
Most Venezuelans are convinced that they live in a rich country with the largest oil reserves in the world, and are prone to think that energy prices mainly gasoline-should be cheap. (El Universal, 07-23-2012; http://www.eluniversal.com/english/; The Washington Post, 07-20-2012, http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/the_americas/chavez-gasoline-rationing-plan-in-border-states-causes-uproar-suggests-production-problems/2012/07/20/gJQAVKZeyW_story.html)

Oil sales to the US drop to 11%
Venezuelan oil exports to the United States slipped back again in the first half of 2012, according to preliminary data collected by the statistical arm of the US Department of Energy. The information supplied by the US government points out that in January-June 2012, approximately 823,000 barrels per day (bpd) of crude oil were shipped to US ports. This volume is 11% lower than the exports counted in the first half of 2011, which averaged 925,000 bpd. (El Universal, 07-26-2012; http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/120726/venezuelan-oil-sales-to-the-us-tumble-to-11)

Analyst says Venezuela will boost MERCOSUR'S energy capability.
According to Venezuelan expert Miguel Jaimes, the nation´s entry to MERCOSUR will add the largest proven and certified oil reserves on earth, as well as the eight largest gas reserves: 297.57 billion barrels of oil and 196 billion cubic feet of gas. He also says Venezuela's electricity generating potential is over 25.000 megawatts. More in Spanish: (AVN, 07-27-2012; http://www.avn.info.ve/contenido/analista-destaca-venezuela-como-potenciador-fortaleza-energética-mercosur)

Zulia power generation system expanded, according to the government
President Chavez has inaugurated the Bajo Grande thermoelectric power plant, with 100 megawatts-generating capacity in Zulia state. (AVN, 07-22-2012; http://www.avn.info.ve/contenido/venezuela-expands-power-generation-system-zulia)

Butene plant opened in western Venezuela
President Hugo Chavez inaugurated a plant to process organic chemical compound 1-butene at Petrochemical Complex Ana Maria Campos, in the Sur del Lago region of the western state of Zulia. The plant is to provide the compound necessary to ensure a total coverage of plastic manufacturing process in the country. 1–Butene (C4H8) is a colorless, flammable, liquefied gas with a slightly aromatic odor which may be used in the production of plastics, lubricants, mercaptans, flavors and fragrances. (AVN, 07-22-2012; http://www.avn.info.ve/contenido/opened-1–butene-plant-western-venezuela)

Iran builds oil tanker for Venezuela, demonstrating shipbuilding capabilities
Iran’s official news agency is reporting the country has finished building an oil tanker for Venezuela, a key ally. The IRNA report says the project means Iran has joined countries with capability of building oil tankers. It comes as Iran considers building nuclear-powered freighters and oil tankers. That could provide a reason to increase the level of its uranium enrichment for fuel. The West suspects Iran is aiming at building nuclear weapons. Iran denies that. (The Washington Post, 07-24-2012; http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/report-iran-finishes-oil-tanker-for-venezuela-demonstrating-shipbuilding-capabilities/2012/07/24/gJQAGvEx6W_story.html#)




Logistics & Transport

29 ships remain at bay in Puerto Cabello
Ships continue arriving at the port of Puerto Cabello, primarily bearing basic foodstuff. According to Port authority reports, 21 ships are at dock: 11 bear in bulk products and in transit time remains at 21 days. More in Spanish: (El Carabobeño, 07-27-2012; http://www.el-carabobeno.com/impreso/articulo/25569/son-29-los-buques-en-la-baha-portea; Notitarde, http://www.notitarde.com/notitarde/plantillas/notitarde/inota.aspx?idart=1705883&idcat=9849&tipo=2)

Restrictions to continue on US air carriers
US carriers will continue to be restricted by Venezuelan authorities, who met with airline carriers to reiterate a policy adopted weeks ago. More in Spanish: (El Universal, 07-27-2012; http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/120727/seguiran-las-trabas-para-las-cargueras-norteamericanas)




Politics

Venezuela is now out of ICSID
On Wednesday, July 25th, Venezuela's withdrawal from the International Center for Settlement of Investment Disputes, or ICSID, went into effect. (AVN, 07-25-2012; http://www.avn.info.ve/contenido/venezuela-exit-icsid-force-july-25; El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/120725/venezuelas-withdrawal-from-icsid-is-made-effective)

... also withdraws from regional human rights court
President Hugo Chavez says Venezuela is withdrawing from the regional human rights court that Latin America's leftist leaders have increasingly criticized as a pawn of Washington. Allies of Venezuela including Bolivia, Ecuador and Nicaragua have accused the Inter-American Court of Human Rights of improperly weighing in on disputes still being heard in domestic courts and working to undermine leftist governments. (Reuters, 07-25-2012; http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/07/25/us-venezuela-oas-idUSBRE86O03M20120725; The Washington Post, 07-24-2012; http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/the_americas/hugo-chavez-says-venezuela-will-pull-out-of-regional-human-rights-court-condemns-decision/2012/07/24/gJQAXV0v7W_story.html)

UN fears "devastating" effects from Venezuela's withdrawal from IACHR
The Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) says Venezuela's pullout of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights, Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR Court) would be "devastating" for the international organization. Spokesperson Rupert Colville told Efe that the move "will be not good for Venezuela either." (El Universal, 07-26-2012; http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/120726/un-fears-devastating-effects-of-venezuelas-withdrawal-from-iachr)

Chavez signals preference in US presidential race, comparing his rival to Romney
Hugo Chavez has signaled a preference in the U.S. presidential campaign by comparing Mitt Romney to his own challenger. Chavez, who is up for re-election a month before U.S. President Barack Obama, has in recent weeks expressed a clear preference for the man currently in the White House. In a campaign speech Saturday night, Chavez equated the agenda of his challenger, Henrique Capriles, with that of Romney, saying both men represent the callously selfish capitalist elite. (The Washington Post, 07-22-2012; http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/the_americas/venezuelas-chavez-signals-preference-in-us-presidential-race-comparing-his-rival-to-romney/2012/07/22/gJQAoGAq2W_story.html)

REPSOL should reach friendly deal with Argentina over YPF, says Chavez
President Hugo Chavez indicated that Spain's REPSOL SA come to a "friendly" agreement with Argentina's government as both parties remain in dispute over the recent nationalization of Argentine oil and gas company YPF SA (YPF). "I advise them to think it through very carefully," Mr. Chavez said in comments carried on state television, following a meeting with Argentine Planning Minister Julio de Vido. In May, Argentina's government expropriated 51% of YPF from its majority shareholder, REPSOL, after President Cristina Kirchner accused the Spanish company of under investing and using YPF's generous dividends to fund operations in other countries. (Fox Business, 07-24-2012; http://www.foxbusiness.com/news/2012/07/24/venezuela-chavez-repsol-should-reach-friendly-deal-with-argentina-over-ypf/)

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

July 10th, 2012


Economics & Finance

56% of reported foreign investment is non repatriated dividends
According to an UNCTAD (UN Commission for Trade and Development) report on foreign investment in 2012, Venezuela received foreign investments of U$D 5.3 billion. However, more than half the amount - some 56% is due to repressed earnings by multinational corporations that have not been able to repatriate dividends because they have not been authorized by the local currency board. Eduardo Porcarelli, executive director of the National Investment Promotion Council says "Venezuela has exchange controls and part of the earnings must be reinvested locally as they cannot be repatriated. It is difficult to ascertain which companies have an investment policy and which do so as they have no other choice." More in Spanish: (El Nacional, 07-10-2012; http://www.el-nacional.com/)

Price adjustments frozen in order to contain inflation
Executive Vice President Elias Jaua has conceded that the slowdown in inflation this year is the result of "a correct policy of regulation and subsidies" on the part of the government. Official anti-inflation strategy has been to freeze price adjustments, not only on regulated items, but also on other products that impact the National Consumer Price Index. More in Spanish: (El Universal, 07-10-2012; http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/120710/gobierno-contiene-la-inflacion-al-evitar-ajustes-de-precios)

Government spending is up  by 24% in real terms, according to information supplied by the Ministry of Finance for the first half of 2012. (El Universal, 07-09-2012; http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/120709/central-government-spending-leaps-24)

International reserves rose 12% in four days, from U$D 25.238 billion to U$D 28.393 billion, which increases the amount of currency disposable for imports and FONDEN programs in advance of October elections. More in Spanish: (El Universal, 07-10-2012; http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/120710/reservas-internacionales-suben-12-en-cuatro-dias)




Commodities

Chavez sees oil stabilizing at U$D100 per barrel
President Hugo Chavez says that "The price of oil is going to stabilize around U$D100 per barrel. Everything seems to indicate that," he told a news conference. International reserves were dropping, Chavez said, except in a few countries like Venezuela, Iran and Saudi Arabia. "And the needs are going to keep growing," he said. (Reuters, 07-09-2012; http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/07/09/us-venezuela-oil-idUSBRE8681CC20120709)

Venezuela’s export barrel recovered significantly, gaining U$D 6.70/bbl. or 7.77% to U$D 92.87/bbl., during the week that concludes today, informed the Oil and Mining Ministry in its Twitter account. The Venezuelan oil has thus put an end to eight consecutive weeks of losses during which it lost over 20% of its price. (Veneconomy, 07-09-2012; http://www.veneconomy.com/site/index.asp?ids=44&idt=31206&idc=4)

TOTAL aims to triple output at Venezuelan gas field
French oil major TOTAL said on Monday it would boost capacity later this year at the Yucal Placer gas field in Venezuela as part of a plan to triple its output by the end of 2014. The Yucal Placer field, a project whose owners also include Spanish energy company REPSOL YPF and Venezuela's INEPETROL and OTEPI, came on stream in 2004. Work on the new development phase of the field will start later this year to increase production to around 300 million cubic feet per day, or approximately 55,000 barrels of oil equivalent, by the end of 2014, TOTAL said. That is three times its current production. (Reuters, 07-09-2012; http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/07/09/total-venezuela-idUSL6E8I97L720120709)

Cement production dropping
Spokesmen for the National Cement Workers Union are warning that cement production - in an industry taken over by the government in 2008 - has dropped from 10,000 metric tons per year to 7.9 million tons, which is 20% less than production capacity. More in Spanish: (Ultimas Noticias, 07-10-2012; http://www.ultimasnoticias.com.ve/noticias/actualidad/economia/alertan-sobre-caida-de-la-produccion-de-cemento.aspx)




International Trade

Paraguay sues to prevent Venezuela's entry into MERCOSUR
Paraguay has presented the MERCOSUR Permanent Tribunal with a suit against its suspension as a member of the trading group, as well as against Venezuela's incorporation without the approval of the Paraguayan Senate. A spokesman for the legal team says "Our action points to the violation of treaties such as the Asunción Agreement, the Ouro Preto and Ushuaia Protocols, as well as international law tenets on equal justice and non intervention." More in Spanish: (El Nacional, 07-10-2012; http://www.el-nacional.com/)

Uruguay's Vice President says MERCOSUR is "seriously wounded" by Venezuela's entry
Uruguayan Vice President Danilo Astori, who is responsible for his government's economic team, considers Venezuela's entry into MERCOSUR negative for the region, and says it was "agreed to at a summit held in Mendoza by the Presidents of Argentina, Brazil and Uruguay, without regard for current institutions". He calls the event the most serious institutional wound suffered by MERCOSUR in all its history. More in Spanish: (El Universal, 07-10-2012; http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/120710/dicen-que-ingreso-de-venezuela-a-mercosur-deja-grave-herida)

Venezuela in conflict with MERCOSUR doctrine
If Venezuela enters MERCOSUR as full member next July 31 it will have to change into a free-market economy instead of one controlled by the government. This is opposite of what Venezuela has been doing, but the Asunción Treaty  which establishes a Common Market between Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay requires "the free movement of goods, services and factors of production between countries through, inter alia, the elimination of customs duties and non-tariff restrictions on the movement of goods, and any other equivalent measures." (El Universal, 07-09-2012; http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/120709/venezuela-clashes-with-mercosur-doctrine; http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/120707/venezuela-four-years-to-adopt-mercosur-rules)

Chavez will travel to Brazil for MERCOSUR entry
President Hugo Chavez confirms he will travel to Río de Janeiro on July 31st for his country's incorporation into MERCOSUR. More in Spanish: (Últimas Noticias, 07-10-2012; http://www.ultimasnoticias.com.ve/noticias/actualidad/politica/chavez-estara-en-brasil-para-ingreso-al-mercosur.aspx)




Logistics & Transport

Shippers report "widespread congestion" at local ports, apply surcharges
Shipping companies have notified Venezuelan clients of a surcharge for bringing cargo into the country due to "widespread congestion". A local client has received a message from a shipping company which says "We must advise you that due to the general situation at Venezuelan ports we will a Congestion Surcharge/Destination starting July 1st, 2012". The surcharge will be U$D 50 on 20 foot containers; U$D 100 on 40 containers and an equal amount for "high-cube" equipment. This is not an isolated case as there is "great concern among worldwide shippers due to enormous delays on vessels when they come to Venezuela", says a source close to maritime transportation. The increase in incoming vessels bearing imported food is one of the key causes for delays. "We have had ships waiting up to 30 days in order to dock. The government has become the main importer and does so without any planning", says another source. The situation has become further aggravated at Guanta, where - according to sources close to the terminal - a group of "pirates" assaulted cargo at a one of the ships at dock. More in Spanish: (El Universal, 07-08-2012; http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/120708/navieras-reportan-congestion-generalizada-en-puertos-locales)




Politics

Chavez will not debate Capriles or sign pre-election game rules
In his first campaign press conference President Chavez called any pre-election rules agreement "illegal", and refused to debate Henrique Capriles. He has announced he will start touring the country in his reelection bid. "That proposal for not co-opting all mass media, not using public resources, and respecting election results, would be a part of  a destabilizing strategy", he said. More in Spanish: (El Nacional, ; http://www.el-nacional.com/)

Chavez again claims he is "totally free" of cancer
This Monday President Hugo Chavez again declared himself fully recovered from cancer and ready to return to the streets for his re-election campaign ahead of an October vote. "Free, free, totally free," an ebullient Chavez told reporters when asked if he was free of the disease that struck a year ago. (Reuters, 07-09-2012; http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/07/10/us-venezuela-election-chavez-idUSBRE8681CQ20120710; Latin American Herald Tribune, http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=535359&CategoryId=10718; The Washington Post, http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/the_americas/venezuelas-chavez-says-hes-beaten-cancer-recuperation-wont-affect-re-election-bid/2012/07/09/gJQA72Y6YW_story.html; Fox News, http://www.foxnews.com/world/2012/07/09/chavez-says-been-completely-cancer-free/)

DATANALISIS: Pro Chavez voting intention at 57.22%
The latest survey by polling firm DATANALISIS, carried out between May 29 and June 28, 2012, shows voting intention in favor of Hugo Chavez Frias at 57.22%. A pro government television analyst has said that -according to the survey- if elections took place on Sunday, Chavez would have 47% and his nearest contender Henrique Capriles Randonski 30%, with undecided voters at 23%. (AVN, 07-09-2012; http://www.avn.info.ve/node/121454)

Chavez congratulates Mexico’s Peña Nieto on election victory
President Hugo Chavez has congratulated Mexico’s president-elect on his victory in the July 1 balloting and expressed his willingness to deepen bilateral ties, according to a statement by the Venezuelan Foreign Ministry. (Latin American Herald Tribune, 07-07-2012; http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=534261&CategoryId=10717)

Friday, March 16, 2012

March 16, 2012

Economics & Finance

Moody's ratifies Venezuela's debt ratings
Moody’s credit rating agency confirmed Venezuela's debt rating last Tuesday, but warned that if the government's financial position further deteriorates because of higher spending or a sudden decline in oil prices, downward pressure would be placed on ratings. Moody's said in a statement that it confirmed Venezuela's "B2" foreign currency government bond rating. The outlook for the rating is stable, Reuters reported. The credit rating agency also confirmed Venezuela's "B1" local currency government bond rating. Moody's said that the outlook of the rating is stable, the news agency added. (El Universal, 03-14-2012; http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/120314/moodys-ratifies-venezuelas-debt-ratings; Reuters, http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/03/13/idUSWNA238620120313)

‘Fair’ Costs and Prices Law is simply a sophistication of controls that are not new and have been in force here for the last nine years, says DATANÁLISIS CEO Luis Vicente León. He points out controls in Venezuela have historically only made problems worse and have fed inflation. (Veneconomy, 03-14-2012; http://www.veneconomy.com/site/index.asp?ids=44&idt=29783&idc=3)

CADIVI and banks evaluate new procedures for imports
Currency Board (CADIVI) authorities and representatives of the public and private authorized exchange operators have been meeting to analyze new procedures that are coming in place for renewing or withdrawing applications for foreign exchange for import of goods. The procedures seek to simplify procedures and shorten response times, according to CADIVI information. More in Spanish: (AVN, 03-14-2012; http://www.avn.info.ve/node/103230)

Paralyzed plant provides MERCAL and PDVAL
1,200 workers at the DEMASECA plant, a key provider of cornmeal to PDVAL and MERCAL, have stopped activities in search of a new collective bargaining agreement after waiting 8 months to begin wage discussions after the Government expropriated the company – which processes and stores wheat flour, cornmeal, oil, pasta, rice and oats. Actual Government occupation has not taken place and plant owners do not want to sign a new contract because of the expropriation decree. The plant produces 18 tons per day of corn flour. More in Spanish: (El Nacional, 03-14-2012; http://www.el-nacional.com/)




Commodities

RUSORO expects Venezuela gold takeover as talks fail
RUSORO Mining Ltd., the last remaining publicly traded gold miner in Venezuela, expects its gold assets in the South American country to be taken over after a deadline to negotiate with the government lapsed, Chief Executive Officer Andre Agapov said. The stock slid 12%. RUSORO is preparing to seek international arbitration to obtain compensation for the assets as the Venezuelan government’s joint venture offers undervalue the company’s gold resources, Agapov said today in a phone interview from New York.“As of today, all the assets will be nationalized and they will take control of operations,” Agapov said. RUSORO would be the fifth mining company seeking compensation from Venezuela through the World Bank’s arbitration court following nationalizations. (Business Week, 03-15-2012; http://www.businessweek.com/news/2012-03-15/rusoro-expects-venezuela-gold-takeover-as-talks-fail)




Politics

Rumors in Venezuela as Chavez returns
When President Hugo Chavez returns to Venezuela this week after an operation in Cuba to remove a cancerous lesion, he will find a country swirling with rumors. With less than seven months to go before presidential elections, few know the true state of the socialist leader’s health. It is unclear whether he will even be able to stand, let alone campaign effectively, as he faces several weeks of radiotherapy and perhaps other treatment following his return from Havana. The uncertainty has focused attention on who could replace the founder of the “Bolivarian revolution”, who has attempted to keep himself in the limelight with Twitter messages, telephone calls and cabinet meetings on state television, as well as releasing occasional photographs. (Financial Times, http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/02632d92-6dd0-11e1-b9c7-00144feab49a.html#axzz1pBgiLwP8)

Venezuela rebuts Guyana's application at the UN
Venezuela has rejected an application submitted by Guyana to the United Nations Commission on the Limits of Continental Shelf, which seeks to extend its continental shelf. It has reminded the UN that the territory west of the Essequibo River is the subject of a territorial sovereignty dispute "inherited from colonialism" and subject to the Geneva Agreement of 1966 and, as such, to the Good Offices of the UN Secretary-General, "to which Venezuela is fully committed." (El Universal, 03-14-2012; http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/120314/venezuela-rebuts-guyanas-application-at-the-un)

Government refuses access to the UN and the Inter American Human Rights Commission
Representatives from the UN and the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) will find closed doors in Venezuela, unless the Government "deems it appropriate" to invite them in”. The Government made its position clear in a final report sent to the Human Rights Council United Nations in response to the Universal Periodic Review of Human Rights which the country underwent in October. More in Spanish: (El Universal, 03-15-2012; http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/120315/gobierno-rechaza-abrirle-las-puertas-a-la-onu-y-a-la-cidh)

PDVSA oil spill exposes fissures in Chavez’s Socialist Party
An oil spill at a facility operated by Venezuela’s state oil company has sparked the first public spat in the ruling party since President Hugo Chavez was diagnosed with cancer in June. While PDVSA President Rafael Ramirez told reporters Feb. 29 that 5,000 to 6,000 barrels of oil had been spilled and that the water supply was fit for drinking. Jose Gregorio Briceño, a government loyalist and governor of Monagas state, an oil producing region in the east of the country, said the government is trying to restart a water treatment plant that has been off line for more than a month when there are still traces of oil in the river that supplies the state capital Maturin. He also said that PSUV party officials, including the party’s vice president, Diosdado Cabello, are taking advantage of Chavez’s absence while he recovers from an operation in Cuba, to attack him. (Bloomberg, 03-13-2012; http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-03-13/venezuelan-oil-spill-exposes-fissures-in-chavez-s-ruling-socialist-party.html)

Improved US-Venezuela relations need to be based on “specific progress, according to US Deputy Chief of Mission James Derham, who spoke at an Inter American Dialogue event in Washington this week. He said the US is interested in improving its “very complicated” relations with Venezuela but that it has to go beyond rhetoric. More in Spanish: (El Universal; http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/120316/eeuu-aboga-por-avances-concretos-en-relacion-con-venezuela)