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 ICSID. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ICSID. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 26, 2016

April 26, 2016


International Trade


Venezuela runs up US$1 billion debt for late shipping containers

Venezuelan state agencies have run up close to US$1 billion in debts with shipping firms due to delays in returning containers, potentially boosting the cost of importing staple goods as the country struggles with product shortages and an economic crisis. The agencies have held containers for months or simply never returned them, at times leaving the truck-sized steel boxes for years in oil industry facilities or on provincial farms even though this costs US$ 100 per day per container, according to industry sources. The debts have piled up over the last six years, coinciding with a steady rise in the role of state agencies in importing goods to Venezuela, particularly food. The country is served by industry giants such as MAERSK of Denmark and HAMBURG SUD of Germany. The container debts put shipping lines on a long list of industries ranging from international airlines to telecommunications giants that have complained of being unable to collect on billions of dollars in unpaid Venezuelan bills. (Reuters, http://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-shipping-idUSKCN0XJ1HK)

 

Three ships have arrived bearing wheat for bakeries, according to Tomas Ramos, President of Venezuela’s Bakery Industry Federation. More in Spanish: (Notitarde; http://www.notitarde.com/Economia/Tres-buques-han-arribado-al-pais-con-trigo-panadero/2016/04/25/951979/)

 

Arreaza reports medical supplies and medication are arriving at ports

Social Affairs Vice President Jorge Arreaza says medication and medical supplies are arriving here for the National Health Service and private services. “We are starting to receive medications”, he claims. More in Spanish:  (Ultimas Noticias, http://www.ultimasnoticias.com.ve/noticias/actualidad/politica/gobierno-anuncia-el-arribo-de-medicamentos-y-equip.aspx#ixzz46vZmnEE8;El Nacional, http://www.el-nacional.com/politica/Arreaza-medicamentos-material-quirurgico-llegaron_0_836316648.html)

 

 

Oil & Energy


HALLIBURTON curtailing business activity in Venezuela

U.S. oil services firm Halliburton Co has decided to begin curtailing activity in Venezuela, the company said on Friday, less than two weeks after SCHLUMBERGER Ltd announced a similar decision as a result of payment difficulties. Venezuelan state oil company PDVSA has struggled to settle unpaid bills to service firms as a result of low oil prices and heavy bond payments that the company must make this year. "During the quarter we made the decision to begin curtailing activity in Venezuela," HALLIBURTON said in an earnings release. (Reuters, http://www.reuters.com/article/us-halliburton-venezuela-idUSKCN0XJ2RC)

 

Blackouts in parts of Caracas Excluded from Electricity Rationing

Vast areas of the Venezuelan capital report electricity blackouts, even though Caracas was excluded from the 4-hour-a-day ration ordered by the government and which is being imposed on the rest of the country for at least 40 days. With no official reports on the power cuts made public, the media were quick to notice that the blackouts chiefly affect the capital’s densely populated east side. The daily El Nacional said that the cuts began shortly after sunrise. The power cuts announced last week by the government exclude Caracas, the neighboring state of Vargas and a northeastern region of Venezuela that includes the touristic island of Margarita, as well as urban areas where hospitals, airports and security forces’ headquarters are located. (Latin American Herald Tribune, http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=2410730&CategoryId=10717; Bloomberg, http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-04-21/venezuela-calls-for-patriotism-as-it-plans-to-ration-electricity); Latin American Herald Tribune, http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=2410595&CategoryId=10717; http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=2410568&CategoryId=10717)

 

FEDECAMARAS says electricity crisis is due to poor planning, mismanagement of US$ 95 billion

Francisco Martínez, President of the nation’s largest business federation (FEDECÁMARAS) has charged the government with poor planning on electricity here. “The electricity problem is a consequence of poor management, poor planning”, he said. He also said this problem involves corruption: “Venezuelans need to know what they have done with US$ 95 billion invested into the electricity system in order to have the disaster we have in Venezuela” More in Spanish: (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/noticias/economia/fedecemaras-tema-electrico-producto-una-mala-planificacion_306578)

 

Venezuela oil price rises for 2nd week

The price Venezuela receives for its mix of medium and heavy oil rose slightly as oil prices around the world also rose on a strike in Kuwait. According to figures released by the Ministry of Petroleum and Mining, the average price of Venezuelan crude sold by Petroleos de Venezuela S.A. (PDVSA) during the week ending April 22 was US$ 32.39, up 29 cents from the previous week's US$ 32.10. According to Venezuelan government figures, the average price in 2016 for Venezuela's mix of heavy and medium crude is now US$ 27.03 for the year to date. (Latin American Herald Tribune, http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=2410639&CategoryId=10717)

 

 

Commodities


Regime strangles POLAR in FOREX allocations, plants grinding to a halt

Omaira Sayago, executive director of the Beer Manufacturers Chamber, reports that the only manufacturer not receiving FOREX is POLAR, which has a US$ 200 million in debts with suppliers dating back to 2014 and has run out of inventories. The company had planned to migrate to the DICOM (controlled official FOREX rate) system rival manufacturers are using, but has received no reply from the government. Four of its plants will shut down this week, impacting 80% if the population. POLAR union leader Arquímedes Sequera has reported that the Labor Inspector’s Office has confirmed the lack of supplies to produce beer and malt at their San Joaquin plant, and 1,340 workers are at risk of being suspended if it closes. Marisa Guinand, POLAR’s Personnel Director, reports that the standstill of beer manufacturing plants will take place gradually, for not all facilities have the same storage capacity. She stressed the government has failed to give the company an equal treatment over foreign currency access compared to rival enterprises. (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/noticias/daily-news/empresas-polar-asks-for-egalitarian-foreign-currency-allocation_306553); and more in Spanish; (Ultimas Noticias, http://www.ultimasnoticias.com.ve/noticias/actualidad/economia/este-viernes-se-paralizan-las-ultimas-plantas-de-c.aspx#ixzz46vaVneHU;El Nacional, http://www.el-nacional.com/economia/Polar-Maracaibo-San-Joaquin-viernes_0_836316423.html; http://www.el-nacional.com/economia/Inspectoria-trabajo-confirmo-Cerveceria-Polar_0_836316535.html; Notitarde; http://www.notitarde.com/Economia/Polar-es-la-unica-cerveceria-afectada-por-falta-de-divisas-2661776/2016/04/23/950725/)

 

 

Economy & Finance

 
IMF warns that Venezuela’s economy could collapse entirely in 2017

Robert Rennhack, Deputy Director in the Western Hemisphere Department of the International Monetary Fund, has issued a statement warning that Venezuela’s economy could collapse completely in one and a half years of government financial policies are not corrected. This could happen in 12 to 18 months. He also warns that inflation will reach 2,200% in 2017, and believes annual inflation could be up to 13,000%, which is what experts call full hyperinflation. More in Spanish: (El Nacional, http://www.el-nacional.com/economia/FMI-advierte-economia-colapsar-completamente_0_833916878.html)

 

ICSID orders Venezuela to pay for VESTEY expropriation

The World Bank’s International Center for the Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID) has ordered Venezuela to pay almost US$ 100 million to Britain’s VESTEY cattle group for taking over a number of the company’s estates here. The late President Hugo Chavez ordered a takeover of VESTEY properties in 2005. ICSID has now ordered Venezuela to pay up US$ 98 million plus interest. More in Spanish: (Notitarde; http://www.notitarde.com/Economia/Ciadi-ordena-al-pais-pagar-por-expropiacion-a-Vestey/2016/04/22/948388/; El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/noticias/economia/ciadi-ordena-venezuela-pagar-ganadera-britanica-por-expropiacion_306056; El Nacional, http://www.el-nacional.com/economia/Banco-Mundial-Venezuela-Vestey-expropiaciones_0_833916839.html)

 

FEDECÁMARAS says President Maduro’s “productive motors” have had no results

FEDECÁMARAS President Francisco Martínez reports that the launching of “productive motors” announced by President Nicolas Maduro to reinvigorate the economy has been ineffective.  He said that a few independent businessmen have attended the established working groups in order to talk to Economic Vice President Miguel Perez Abad, but have received no answers about FOREX allocations to suppliers; “All we have seen is frustration because the business sector continues to be under government attack”. More in Spanish: (El Nacional, http://www.el-nacional.com/economia/Fedecamaras-Motores-productivos-resultados_0_836316465.html)

 

…and Isturiz tells business to break open their FOREX “piggy banks

Venezuela’s Executive Vice President Aristobulo Isturiz says any Venezuelan businessman who has FOREX abroad should repatriate it to propel the nation’s economy. “At Venezuela’s current situation, all those who have dollars abroad should break open their “piggy bank”, He criticized Lorenzo Mendoza for saying POLAR cannot produce food and beverages for lack of FOREX: “It cannot be that one who has most dollars abroad says he does not produce because the government does not allocate dollars, when there are businessmen who have far less than he and are contributing in order to move forward”. More in Spanish: (El Mundo, http://www.elmundo.com.ve/noticias/actualidad/noticias/isturiz--empresarios-deberian-romper-su--cochinito.aspx#ixzz46vXFEvDC; Ultimas Noticias, http://www.ultimasnoticias.com.ve/noticias/actualidad/politica/isturiz-empresarios-deberian-romper-su--cochinito-.aspx)

 

Cattlemen report that their productivity is down 50%

Carlos Albornoz, head of the National Cattlemen’s Federation, reports that agricultural production has dropped by more tan 50%, Last Thursday, Venezuelan rural producers demonstrated in the city of Valle de la Pascua to demand better working conditions from the government. “We are barely producing 31% of the beef we eat, a Little over 35% of milk, merely 32% of White corn and 22% of yellow corn, and 60% of rice…we have no machinery, security or profitability”. He reported a lot of cattle is perishing due to lack of food and supplies. More in Spanish: (Notitarde; http://www.notitarde.com/Economia/Fedenaga-Productividad-ha-bajado-50/2016/04/21/948371/)

 

70% of all industries report drops in their production levels, according to Juan Pablo Olalquiaga, President of the Venezuelan Confederation of Industries (CONINDUSTRIA). He reports that manufacturing is operating at 43.87% capacity “and the trend is for it to continue dropping if emergency measures are not taken.” More in Spanish: (Notitarde; http://www.notitarde.com/Economia/70-de-la-industria-reporta-caida-en-nivel-de-produccion-/2016/04/21/948368/; El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/noticias/economia/del-sector-industrial-reporto-caida-niveles-produccion_305994; El Mundo, http://www.elmundo.com.ve/noticias/economia/gremios/conindustria--empresas-trabajan-43-87--de-su-capac.aspx)

 

All you need to know about Venezuela's looming implosion

It now seems inevitable that Venezuela, for decades touted as a “socialist paradise”, will disintegrate by the end of the year. It’s the ultimate case of “Dutch disease”, a country now rotten from depending far too much on the export of a primary product and, as a result, facing a currency so bloated it can’t maintain productivity and competitiveness. Venezuela’s problem is the crashing price of oil, its major export commodity. About 95% of the country’s exports, in fact. Because of that, it’s considered to be burdened with the riskiest debt in the world. Revenue from oil exports is said to have plummeted from US$37.2 billion in 2014 to US$ 12.6 billion. Compounding the problem, it also has to import roughly half of the food its people consume. In the middle of Chavez’s reign, the government seized control of some 3 million hectares of agricultural land in an effort to control production and prices. Now it sits idle, because the overvalued currency means it’s cheaper to import food than grow and distribute it. While the Venezuelan government still denies it, for nearly two years now, people have been saying they must wait several days in lines to enter government grocery stores for basic essential items which may not even be on the shelf when they finally get through the door. The other edge of the sword is that when Venezuelans eventually get inside the stores, they’re leaving with much more than they need, because reselling it across the border into Colombia and Brazil is extremely lucrative. There’s huge pressure on the government to maintain the subsidies or face a political backlash from the country’s significant chunk of voters beset by poverty. In February, Venezuela topped the “Misery Index,” an annual list compiled by The Cato Institute. For the second year in a row, it was considered the most miserable country in the world based on data about a country’s inflation rate, interest rates, and unemployment.  Poverty levels are now approaching 90%. Now, the inevitable violence and chaos is starting to spill over. There’s been no official homicide data from Venezuela since 2006, but one local think tank puts the rate at 92 killings per 100,000 citizens. It’s almost five times the rate in the year before Hugo Chavez came to power. Now death, lynching, prison breakouts, deadly student protests and mafia executions dominate the pages of national newspapers. The latest note from Deutsche Bank says even a return to US$ 100 a barrel for oil won’t help Venezuela. It needs closer to US$ 200 just to balance its budget. Communications services are now being cut. The government owes some US$ 700 million to private telecoms and cable firms, one of which, the giant Telefonica, has suspended long distance calls to the US, Europe and crucial partners Colombia, Brazil and Panama. And now Venezuelans face the next stage in their seemingly inevitable decline – switching off the lights. Venezuelan society is well past the stage of being three square meals away from revolution.  Now, as the FT notes, “the economic crisis risks turning into a humanitarian one”. (Business Insider Australia: http://www.businessinsider.com.au/venezuela-implosion-2016-4)

 

 

Politics and International Affairs

 
Venezuelan high court rules amendment to shorten term does not apply to current president term

Venezuela’s Supreme Tribunal of Justice (TSJ) has ruled that any amendment to the Constitution intended to make President Nicolas Maduro step down is not applicable in his presidential term. According to the high court, the amendment would apply in subsequent presidential terms. In the judgment, the TSJ Constitutional Chamber affirmed that, following a review of a petition for construction of Article 340 of the Constitution, any attempt to use of the amendment to cut the current presidential term would be fraud of the Constitution. (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/noticias/daily-news/venezuelan-high-court-amendment-does-not-apply-current-president-term_306606)

 

National Elections Council delays approval of official recall form

The National Elections Council (CNE) has continued to delay providing the opposition Democratic Unity coalition with the official form required to collect signatures calling for a recall referendum against President Nicolas Maduro. Opposition leader Henrique Capriles announced demonstrations at all CNE offices nationwide to demand action. “No CNE director has the right to block our recall. We are going to go for our form, it’s out right to do so”, he said. He complained that the CNE has not acted even after receiving four letters requesting an approved form. Last week seven opposition legislators chained themselves to CNE railings along with a group of demonstrators to demand the forms, and were violently removed by National Guard officers, who also manhandled newsmen covering the activity. The CNE subsequently threatened legal action against the legislators who “seek to destroy” the institution. More in Spanish: (El Nacional, http://www.el-nacional.com/politica/Capriles-Vamos-buscar-planilla-derecho_0_836316619.html; http://www.el-nacional.com/politica/CNE-amenazo-diputados-quieren-destruirlo_0_835716482.html; El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/noticias/politica/gnb-desalojo-fuerza-diputados-encadenados-sede-del-cne_306033)

 

National Assembly to move on OAS Democratic Charter against Maduro regime

Venezuelan National Assembly President Henry Ramos Allup told CNN-E that the legislature may ask the Organization of American States (OAS) to apply the Hemispheric Democratic Charter against the Maduro regime “as a last step, because it is necessary to previously ensure the indispensable votes for the Charter to be applied, and this requires overcoming obstacles at the OAS since CARICOM nations are there that have permanently received aid from the Venezuelan government and have committed their votes”. He says the opposition has had the “receptivity, balance and responsability” of OAS Secretary General Luis Almagro, and we have gone to other legislatures in friendly nations. He says that although they will make a formal petition to the OAS they are trying to fine tune instruments in order “to avoid setbacks, we know anything we try and fail at will be used by the Venezuelan government as a victory”. A delegation of legislators, headed by Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Luis Florido, is travelling to Washington to meet with OAS Secretary General Almagro, to analyze ways to proceed. Article 20 of the Democratic Charter, which was approved in 2001, authorizes Almagro or a member State to convene the Permanent Council “in the event of an unconstitutional alteration of the constitutional regime that seriously impairs the democratic order in a member State” (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/noticias/daily-news/oas-almagro-may-apply-democratic-charter-venezuela_306531; and more in Spanish: (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/noticias/politica/delegacion-reunira-con-secretario-general-oea_306560; Infolatam: http://www.infolatam.com/2016/04/25/oposicion-venezolana-evaluara-en-oea-la-activacion-de-la-carta-democratica/; Informe21: http://informe21.com/politica/allup-en-cnn-necesitamos-asegurar-votos-para-la-carta-democratica)

 

The National Assembly’s positive rating has dropped down from 64% to 55% since the start of the year, according to a study by the Catholic University’s Political Science Center, and has fallen behind the universities, students, Catholic church, business, and private media. Experts believe the change is due to overblown expectations after Parliamentary elections and the fact that legislative action has been blocked by the Supreme Court, the regime or the National Elections Council. More in Spanish: (El Nacional, http://www.el-nacional.com/politica/Evaluacion-positiva-Asamblea-puntos-porcentuales_0_835716481.html)

 

Former Chavez VP slams Maduro for generating “loss of hope”.

Journalist Jose Vicente Rangel, a former Chavez Vice President and minister, has criticized economic policy and the hopeless message projected by President Nicolas Maduro and those responsible within the regime. He says: “The government’s key weakness is the economic crisis, mainly because of shortages and inflation; the lack of a hopeful discourse and a clearer economic outlook accentuates uncertainty, defenselessness, and sadness”.  He showed results of a poll by pro-government pollster HINTERENLACES, which reveals a drop in public confidence down to 24%. More in Spanish: (Infolatam: http://www.infolatam.com/2016/04/24/exvicepresidente-de-chavez-critica-el-discurso-gubernamental-desesperanzador/)

 

Joel Hirst: The Suicide of Venezuela

Venezuela is slowly, and very publically, dying; an act that has spanned more than fifteen years. National suicide is not product of any one moment. But instead one bad idea, upon another, upon another and another and another and another and the wheels that move the country began to grind slower and slower; rust covering their once shiny facades. Revolution – cold and angry. Hate, as a political strategy. Law, used to divide and conquer. Regulation used to punish. Elections used to cement dictatorship. Corruption bleeding out the lifeblood in drips. Good men and women stuck in a two-decade old debate from which there is no escape. Videos of nightly sacking of supermarkets that are fortuitous enough to have had a supply of something. Tonight there are no lights. They blame the weather – the government does – like the tribal shamans of old who made sacrifices to the gods in the hopes of an intervention. There is no food either; they tell the people to hold on, to raise chickens on the terraces of their apartments. There is no water – and they give lessons on state TV of how to wash with a cup of water. The money is worthless; people now pay with potatoes, if they can find them. Doctors operate using the light of their smart phones; when there is power enough to charge them. Without anesthesia, of course – or antibiotics, like the days before the advent of modern medicine. The phone service has been cut – soon the internet will go and an all-pervading darkness will fall over a feral land. The marathon of destruction is almost finished; the lifeblood of the nation is almost gone. No, there is nothing heroic or epic here; ruins in the making are sad affairs – bereft of the comforting mantle of time which lends intrigue and inevitability. (World Press: https://joelhirst.wordpress.com/2016/04/23/the-suicide-of-venezuela/)

 

 
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, December 19, 2014

December 19, 2014


International Trade

 

Venezuelan exports to the European Union rose 11% in 2014, overall exports dropped 4.9%

Venezuelan exports to the European Union rose 11% in 2014, according to a report by the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB). General exports fell by 4.9%, with a 15% drop in exports to Asia. Exports to Latin America dropped 6%, and exports to the US contracted by 1%. More in Spanish: (El Mundo, http://www.elmundo.com.ve/noticias/economia/politicas-publicas/bid--exportaciones-venezolanas-a-la-union-europea.aspx#ixzz3M9blRRn6)

 

 

Oil & Energy

 

Venezuela’s export barrel averaged US$ 57.53/bbl. this week, down US$ 4.39/bbl, according to a three days late report by the Oil and Mining Ministry. The year-to-date average is US$ 90.50/bbl., well below 2013’s US$ 98.08/bbl. (Veneconomy, http://www.veneconomy.com/site/index.asp?ids=44&idt=42297&idc=4)

 

 

Commodities

 

CVG ALCASA contracts with Italian firm to strengthen aluminum production

State owned CVG ALCASA has signed a contract with Italy's PRESEZZI EXTRUXION for the second phase of the extrusion plant for products such as aluminum, hard alloys, copper and tin. Industry Minister José David Cabello says the plan calls for increasing plant extrusion capacity from 23,500 to 40,000 metric tons per year. More in Spanish: (AVN; http://www.avn.info.ve/contenido/cvg-alcasa-firmó-acuerdo-empresa-italiana-para-fortalecer-producción-aluminio)

 

 

Economy & Finance

 

FITCH downgrades Venezuela's IDRs to 'CCC'

FITCH Ratings has downgraded Venezuela's long-term foreign and local currency issuer default ratings (IDRs) from 'B' to 'CCC'. The issue ratings on Venezuela's senior unsecured foreign and local currency bonds are also downgraded from 'B' to 'CCC'. The country ceiling is downgraded from 'B' to 'CCC' and the short-term foreign currency IDR from 'B' to 'C'.  Venezuela's downgrade reflects the following key factors: International oil prices have declined sharply in Q4'14 increasing balance of payments pressures in the context of reduced external financing flexibility and rising macroeconomic instability. Venezuela's commodity dependence is high, as oil is expected to account for an estimated 92% of current external receipts and 50% of central government revenues in 2014. Low oil prices will erode the main source of FX for the economy. The capacity of the Venezuelan economy to respond to this external shock is constrained by the relatively low level of international reserves, constraints to their operational liquidity, and limited sources of external financing. International reserves, at US$ 21.4 billion, are about half the level of end-2008 when Venezuela last confronted the sharp oil price decline resulting from the global financial crisis. In addition, operational liquidity of reserves is constrained, as 72% of international reserves are held in gold and most of these are held at the central bank in Venezuela. Nontransparent off-budget FX funds will likely come under pressure, as central bank and extraordinary oil revenue contributions will be curtailed. Venezuela's sources of FX financing are limited, the sovereign does not have direct access to international debt markets, and significant multilateral funding is not expected in 2015-2016; China remains the sovereign's main source of financing. Nevertheless, there is no indication that China will increase its exposure to Venezuela beyond the roll-over of existing facilities. Macroeconomic instability has increased, driven by the inconsistency between FX, and fiscal and monetary policies. Continued rationing of FX, widespread price controls, and monetary financing have fueled inflationary pressures. Inflation averaged 55% in the first eight months of 2014. The spread between the official and parallel exchange rates continues to widen at a rapid pace, thus further fueling inflation and currency pressures. Fitch estimates that the economy may have contracted by close to 4% in 2014 and expects Venezuela to remain in recession in 2015. In addition to lack of transparency in government off-budget funds, transparency and timely reporting of official data for inflation, balance of payments and national accounts has suffered since 2013. Continued deterioration in terms of data provision and/or accuracy of official statistics could not only further dent confidence, but also pose limits to the capacity to assess the overall fiscal and external strength of the sovereign. Venezuela sovereign amortizations average 1.2% of GDP in 2015-16 with external debt repayments at 0.4% of GDP (3.5% of exports), using Fitch GDP estimates. As the state-owned oil company PDVSA faces an average of US$ 3.4 billion (0.6% of GDP) in external bond amortizations, average annual public sector external bond amortizations equal close to 22% of the current level of international reserves. The lagging policy response to address external pressures and macroeconomic imbalances, and the present decline in international oil prices materially weaken Venezuela's capacity to service debt. A high level of political polarization, the social impact of the ongoing economic crisis, marked divisions within the government in terms of economic policy, and the expectation of a heavily contested electoral cycle in 2015 could limit policy adjustments and increase the risk of social unrest. (Bloomberg, http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-12-18/venezuela-s-credit-rating-lowered-by-fitch-amid-plunge-in-crude.html; Reuters, http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/12/18/fitch-downgrades-venezuelas-idrs-to-ccc-idUSFit87570120141218; El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/141218/rating-agency-fitch-downgrades-venezuelas-debt; Latin American Herald Tribune, http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=2365812&CategoryId=10717)

 

Venezuela’s GDP now smaller than Chile’s

Venezuela has fallen to sixth place among Latin America’s top seven economies, according to a LATINVEX analysis of new data from the International Monetary Fund (IMF). And in four years, it will likely fall to seventh place, behind Peru. The revised data comes as Venezuela’s own government has not published 2014 data on its economy or oil exports. “Non-official data claim a decline in activity in Venezuela's construction, manufacturing, and retail sectors during 2014,” consulting firm IHS said in an analysis. The IMF estimates that Venezuela’s economy will contract by 3% this year, which will be the worst result in Latin America. Meanwhile, IHS estimates that oil revenues fell by nearly US$ 9 billion in 2014 compared to the previous year. Venezuela’s Gross Domestic Product this year is estimated at US$ 226.3 billion in current prices in US dollars. Chile’s GDP is US$ 279.7 billion, which makes it the fifth-largest economy in Latin America.  The IMF’s new and revised figures for Venezuela are 34% lower than in April, when the fund estimated that Venezuelan GDP stood at US$ 342.1 billion. The IMF now also projects that Peru will pass Venezuela in 2018, when Peru’s GDP will likely reach US$ 274.4 billion versus US$ 262.4 billion for Venezuela. (Latinvex, http://latinvex.com/app/article.aspx?id=1776&utm_source=Weekly+Dec+15%2C+2014&utm_campaign=Weekly+Nov.+17%2C2014&utm_medium=email)

 

Venezuela’s 91% default odds mean nothing as funds dig in

Venezuela’s bonds have lost almost half their value since July as traders have become almost certain the nation will default. Stone Harbor Investment Partners, which manages the two funds with the biggest allocations to the country, is undaunted even as losses balloon. The New York-based firm’s Emerging Markets Total Income Fund and Emerging Markets Income Fund each had at least 20% of their net assets in Venezuelan bonds at the end of August, according to data compiled by Bloomberg, the most among 363 debt funds with at least some exposure to the country. Steffen Reichold, a money manager and economist at Stone Harbor, said Wednesday the firm hasn’t made “significant changes” to its holdings. (Bloomberg, http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-12-18/venezuela-s-91-default-odds-mean-nothing-as-funds-dig-in.html)

 

ICSID confirms Gold Reserve US$ 744 million ruling against Venezuela

The World Bank's arbitration tribunal has confirmed a US$ 744 million ruling against Venezuela in the case brought by Canada's Gold Reserve over expropriation of its two mining projects in the nation's Southeastern region. More in Spanish: (El Mundo, http://www.elmundo.com.ve/noticias/economia/internacional/ciadi-confirma-fallo-contra-venezuela-por--744-mil.aspx#ixzz3M9ZJ3G11; Ultimas Noticias, http://www.ultimasnoticias.com.ve/noticias/actualidad/economia/ciadi-confirma-fallo-contra-venezuela-por-744-mill.aspx)

 

Santander does not have to return US$ 150 million for sale of Banco de Venezuela

The Spanish high court has confirmed the ruling that exempts Banco de Santander from paying a US$ 150 million deposit for the unsuccessful sale of Banco de Venezuela. The court thus refused an appeal by Venezuela's Banco Occidental de Descuento on a 2012 decision by the Madrid High Court. (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/141218/santander-should-not-return-usd-150-million-for-sale-of-banco-de-venez)

 

Executives at US Brokerage Direct Access Partners guilty in US$ 60 million Venezuela BANDES kickback scheme

The former CEO and a former managing director of a U.S. broker-dealer pleaded guilty to bribery charges arising from their scheme to pay bribes to Maria De Los Angeles Gonzalez De Hernandez, a former senior official in Venezuela’s government economic development bank (BANDES), in return for trading business that generated more than US$ 60 million in commissions. (Latin American Herald Tribune, http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=2365726&CategoryId=10717)

 

 

Politics and International Affairs

 

Obama signs Venezuela sanctions bill, Venezuela complains of rejection by US

President Barack Obama has signed into law a bill imposing sanctions on individual Venezuelan officials who U.S. lawmakers say are responsible for violent repression of opposition protests in the Andean nation. The legislation bars the issuance of visas to the named officials and freezes any financial assets they may have in the United States. White House spokesman Josh Earnest has previously insisted that the administration shares Congress' concerns about the situation in Venezuela, where violence associated with months of anti-government protests left 39 people dead and upwards of 800 injured. The president signed the bill targeting Venezuela a day after he announced plans to restore diplomatic ties with Caracas' close ally Cuba, a move hailed by Maduro as a "courageous gesture." After Obama signed the sanctions bill, the Venezuelan leader took to Twitter to blast Washington for its "contradictory" policy. Even as the U.S. government "recognizes the failure of the policies of aggression and embargo against our sister Cuba ... it initiates the escalation of a new stage of aggressions against the homeland of Bolivar," Maduro wrote. In a New York Times op-ed, National Assembly President Diosdado Cabello complained: "We have tried to move toward better relations with the Obama administration, but have been rejected". (Fox News Latino, http://latino.foxnews.com/latino/politics/2014/12/18/obama-signs-venezuela-sanctions-bill/; El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/141218/obama-okays-sanctions-against-venezuelan-government-officers; Latin American Herald Tribune, http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=2365849&CategoryId=10717; Reuters, http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/12/17/us-cuba-usa-maduro-idUSKBN0JV27V20141217; El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/141218/venezuela-applauds-new-course-of-us-cuba-relations, http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/141217/maduro-hails-us-token-of-courage-for-restoring-ties-with-cuba; and more in Spanish: El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/141219/cabello-hemos-sido-rechazados-por-washington)

 

MERCOSUR condemns US sanctions against Venezuela

The heads of state of the Common Market of the South (MERCOSUR) urged the US government not to apply sanctions against Venezuela, and expressed support for the people facing what it termed new interventionist US intentions in the internal affairs of Venezuela. (AVN, http://www.avn.info.ve/contenido/mercosur-rejects-us-sanctions-against-venezuela; El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/141217/mercosur-backs-venezuela-urges-the-us-not-to-enforce-sanctions)

 

Washington emphasizes: Sanctions are against individuals, not the Venezuelan people

The US State Department has underlined that sanctions will be applied against individuals who took part in repressing demonstrations that took place earlier this year. "The law includes blocking assets held in the United States by individuals who have perpetrated or are responsible for ordering or directing significant violence or serious human rights abuses against persons involved in anti government protests in February 2014. These sanctions are directed against individuals, not the Venezuelan people".  More in Spanish: (El Nacional; http://www.el-nacional.com/)

 

Obama makes Maduro’s ‘insolent yankees’ a tougher sell

President Nicolas Maduro’s favorite tool to rally popular support has been a blunt one: Yanqui-bashing. That may lose its clout now that President Barack Obama has moved to restore diplomatic ties with Maduro’s principal ally, Cuba. Like his mentor, the late Hugo Chavez, Maduro has whipped up support by alleging the U.S. is conspiring against Latin American sovereignty, and his Socialist government in particular, citing the embargo on Cuba as the primary example of Washington’s bullying tactics toward the region. With that embargo, which he calls a “blockade,” weakening, Maduro may find his talking points sounding antiquated. (Bloomberg, http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-12-18/obama-makes-maduro-s-insolent-yankees-a-harder-line-to-sell.html; Reuters, http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/12/17/cuba-usa-venezuela-idUSL1N0U123320141217; AVN, http://www.avn.info.ve/contenido/venezuela-celebrates-new-course-diplomatic-relations-between-cuba-and-united-states)

 

Analysts believe US-Cuba rapprochement has "profound implications for Venezuela"

Analysts believe restored diplomatic relations between Cuba and the United States pulls the rug out from under President Nicolás Maduro's policies, and could force him to rephrase his wording. "This announcement moves the floor to Maduro's government regarding its policy towards the United States, and even the internal political discourse, mostly based on the anti-imperialist struggle and condemnation of the US blockade on Cuba," says political expert and dissident "chavista" Nicmer Evans. According to Evans, the US-Cuba rapprochement must have "profound implications for Venezuela." Evans also wonders whether Cuban President Raúl Castro broached the subject with Maduro, who visited Havana last Sunday for a meeting of the Bolivarian Alternative for the Peoples of Our America (ALBA). (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/141217/us-cuba-rapprochement-involves-profound-implications-in-venezuela; http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/141218/experts-caracas-should-analyze-changes-in-havana)

 

Mujica seeks better treatment for Venezuelan political prisoners

Former Uruguayan President José Mujica says that during his recent visit to Venezuela he asked his Venezuelan counterpart Nicolás Maduro to give local political prisoners a good treatment. "In general, I have always asked him (President Maduro) for kindness towards prisoners, especially the political prisoners unfortunately he has to have," he says. After making his statement, Mujica remained silent for some seconds and added: "I do not want to speak any further." (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/141217/jose-mujica-asks-for-good-treatment-of-venezuelan-political-prisoners)

 

 

López continues to boycitt trial proceedings, awaits appeal decision

Opposition leader Leopoldo López has for the fifth time refused to attend a hearing as he awaits results of an appeal to a Caracas court for a decision on the UN request to set him free. His trial judge, Susana Barreiros, has ruled that a UN Working Group is not a part of signed treaties and it's request is not binding. More in Spanish: (Infolatam, http://www.infolatam.com/2014/12/16/lopez-mantiene-su-negativa-de-acudir-juicio-en-espera-de-apelacion/)

 

European Parliament seeks freedom for political prisoners

The European Parliament, which group’s leftist, center and democratic right wing parties from all Europe, has passed a resolution on "persecution of democratic opposition in Venezuela", and have urged the Venezuelan government to abide by UN rulings that seek immediate freedom for Leopoldo López and all those imprisoned for protesting. More in Spanish: (El Nacional; http://www.el-nacional.com/)

 

1.5 million Venezuelans could have migrated abroad

Oscar Hernández, head of the Migration Training Center, says the number of Venezuelans who have migrated in search of new opportunities could come to 1.5 million.  He says their reason for leaving are lack of personal safety and legal guarantees, and adds that according to a study by Venezuela's Central University almost 90% of migrants are college graduates and 40% have graduate degrees. Their main destinations are the United States, France, the United Kingdom, Colombia, Chile, Mexico, Panama and Ecuador due to their economic stability. More in Spanish: (Ultimas Noticias, http://www.ultimasnoticias.com.ve/noticias/actualidad/economia/la-cantidad-de-venezolanos-en-el-exterior-podria-l.aspx#ixzz3M9eVOBrQ)

 

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.