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 Paraguaná Refining. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paraguaná Refining. Show all posts

Thursday, January 14, 2016

January 14, 2016



Logistics & Transport

 

American Airlines writes off US $592 million trapped in Venezuela

American Airlines Group Inc on Tuesday said it has written off more than half a billion dollars in revenue stuck in Venezuela because of currency controls. American, the world's largest airline, said in a regulatory filing it will recognize a $592 million special charge in the just-ended fourth quarter "due to continued lack of repatriations and deterioration of economic conditions in Venezuela." The country's socialist government had compelled carriers to sell tickets in bolivars but made reconverting the sales into U.S. dollars difficult. Globally, airlines have around US$ 3.7 billion trapped in Venezuela as a result of its 12-year-old currency control system, the International Air Transport Association said in June. American also said on Tuesday it continues to expect a pre-tax margin between 12% and 14% for the fourth quarter, excluding special items. It continues to expect that passenger unit revenue fell between 5% and 7% in the quarter from a year earlier. (Reuters, http://www.reuters.com/article/us-american-airline-venezuela-idUSKCN0UQ1OI20160112; El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/160112/american-airlines-writes-off-usd-592-million-trapped-in-venezuela)

 

 

Oil & Energy

 

PDVSA still mulls debt refinance proposal

PDVSA is still mulling a potential bond refinancing, its president said on Tuesday, referring to a proposal floated by the state oil company to seek an extension on payments for bonds maturing this year and next. "We're evaluating it," PDVSA president and Oil Minister Eulogio del Pino told Reuters as he and other executives carried a huge Venezuelan flag during an oil workers march in downtown Caracas. "We're evaluating a whole series of economic measures that the president will announce soon," he added, without giving details. Del Pino told local media in November that PDVSA was mulling a proposal to extend the payment for bonds that mature in 2016 and 2017 to 2018 and 2019, when the company has a lighter payment load. He said this would give better value for investors too because it would help PDVSA's growth and performance. (Reuters, http://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-pdvsa-idUSKCN0UQ2C720160112; El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/160113/pdvsa-assesses-means-to-refinance-debt)

 

Blackout halts Paraguana refineries

Operations at Venezuela's massive 955,000-barrel-per-day Paraguana refinery complex were paralyzed by an electrical blackout on Wednesday morning, according to two workers and an anti-government union leader. Employees at the 645,000-bpd Amuay refinery and adjacent 310,000-bpd Cardon refinery were evacuated as a precaution and children at schools near the complex were sent home, one worker said. Firemen were at the site, another worker added. Images on social media appeared to show thick columns of black smoke emanating from the refineries, which are run by state oil company PDVSA. It was not immediately clear what caused the problems reported by the workers. (Reuters, http://www.reuters.com/article/refinery-operations-pdvsa-idUSL2N14X13O20160113)

 

 

Economy & Finance

 

Oil price nears US$ 20, which is PDVSA’s production cost, banks fear worse recession here

President Maduro says Venezuela’s oil price average is near US$ 24 per barrel. He revealed the figure as he signed a collective bargaining contract with industry workers granting them a 143% raise. DEUTSCHE BANK reports that price is “perilously near PDVSA’s production cost of US$ 20 per barrel”.  The bank adds that for each dollar the price goes down, the nation receives US$ 800 million less for its exports. “As we go from an initial scenario of US$ 48 to US$ 30 per barrel this year, the FOREX deficit can rise from US$ 17.5 billion to US$ 34.2 billion…this will significantly increase the probability, even before the year ends, of a credit event such as a default or a partial restructuring”.  Japan’s NOMURA says that there is a higher risk of social unrest in Venezuela that could “lead to a possible military intervention if the dead end continues”. It warns that an institutional crisis can endanger “the messy transition”, and adds that “political paralysis will worsen recession as the opposition is forced to take back political control”.  BANK OF AMERICA says a number of elements lead to great uncertainty as to whether the Maduro regime will honor foreign debt commitments. It says debt was paid in 2015 despite parliamentary elections which it lost, and says “it now makes political sense for authorities to reconsider their decision since a recall referendum may be called in 2016”, and adds that “the closer that voting gets it becomes more probable that authorities might try to use resources used to pay off debt to cover other expenses that can improve their election prospects”. As to Maduro’s proposed economic emergency decree, BOFA continues to say “it is unlikely the opposition controlled National Assembly will approve the decree. But in any case that decision is only symbolically relevant and not as important as the FOREX rate, price controls and debt service, which are controlled by the Executive.” More in Spanish: (El Nacional: http://www.el-nacional.com/economia/Precio-acerca-produccion-barril-Pdvsa_0_774522722.html)

 

National Economic Council says “Venezuela is in a recession

The National Economic Council has issued a statement asking the government to improve the allocation of FOREX for imports as part of the steps it must take to propel the economy. “Venezuela is in a macroeconomic recession with high inflation and product supply problems”, it says. The statement says this situation is caused by an economic policy that limits supply of goods and services and stimulates domestic demand. More in Spanish: (El Nacional, http://www.el-nacional.com/economia/Consejo-Nacional-Economia-Venezuela-encuentra_0_773922837.html)

 

Main business federation says eliminating controls will improve supply in 8 months

Venezuela’s principal business federation, FEDECAMARAS, says that if the government frees up controls over the economy there will be a “relief” in supply over the coming months. FEDECAMARAS President Francisco Martínez said that the truth is that “we are in an emergency,,.. the nation’s economy cannot wait a second more without giving it due attention. We hope the economic emergency decree announced by President Nicolas Maduro includes adjustments that are so necessary for the country and go to the root of the problem”. He added: “There is no domestic production because we have excessive controls…if those ties are eliminated we will start to see relief in store shelves in 8 to 12 months” More in Spanish:
(El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/160113/eliminar-controles-aliviara-los-anaqueles-en-8-meses; Ultimas Noticias, http://www.ultimasnoticias.com.ve/noticias/actualidad/economia/fedecamaras-medidas-economicas-deberian-ser-conver.aspx; El Nacional, http://www.el-nacional.com/economia/Fedecamaras-realidad-pais-emergencia_0_773922608.html)

 

National Assembly will investigate China-Venezuela and PETROCARIBE agreements

Elias Mata, Vice President of the Energy and Oil Committee of the National Assembly says there are signed agreements the people do not know about, and companies that are managed with little or no transparency. “We will necessarily have to set up a joint committee with the Finance Committee on the matter of the Central Bank, Comptroller’s office and energy and oil…in this context we will be requesting ample information on the terms of the agreements with China and the China Fund. We will do likewise with agreements signed within the framework of PETROCARIBE. All we know is that buybacks have been carried out and we have lost a lot of money.”  In the case of the China Fund, Mata underlined that “it is US$ 60 billion and no one knows what those resources were used for, we must know what they have been invested in”. More in Spanish: (El Mundo, http://www.elmundo.com.ve/noticias/economia/energia/se-revisaran-los-convenios-china-venezuela-y-petro.aspx#ixzz3xDJSxKgl)

 

Venezuela paid US$70,3 million on bond

Venezuela has paid out US $70,3 million in interest on the Venezuela 2034 sovereign debt bond. The next important debt payment the nation must make is scheduled for February when it will have to pay out US$ 1.5 billion upon maturity of the Sovereign 2016 bond. More in Spanish: (El Mundo, http://www.elmundo.com.ve/noticias/economia/politica/venezuela-pago--70-3-millones-por-bono-de-deuda.aspx#ixzz3xDIxOdgs; Ultimas Noticias, http://www.ultimasnoticias.com.ve/noticias/actualidad/economia/venezuela-pago-70-3-millones-por-bono-de-deuda.aspx)

 

 

Politics and International Affairs

 

OAS Secretary General condemns Maduro's "erosion of democracy" in Venezuela

The Secretary General of the Organization of American States (OAS), Luis Almagro, called Tuesday's ruling of the Supreme Court of Venezuela against three opposition deputies a "direct blow to the will" of the voters. "The attempts to harass the opposition, rape the separation of powers and interfere with the powers of the state constitute an erosion of democracy" in Venezuela, Almagro said in an extensive open letter to President Nicolas Maduro. "I am sure you will keep your word and respect the electorate's will."  Almagro argues that the decision of the Electoral Chamber of the Supreme Court to find the National Assembly in contempt and disregard any of the parliament's actions sets the country back to the nineteenth century. "The InterAmerican Democratic Charter forces me to act when institutional political process is altered," he wrote. He added that the Supreme Court intended to undermine the will of the voters when the Electoral Chamber tries to ignore the already accomplished legal effects of the proclamation of the winners of the election. (Latin American Herald Tribune: http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=2403358&CategoryId=10717)

 

Challenged opposition legislators move to unblock congressional deadlock

Three Venezuelan opposition lawmakers voluntarily gave up their seats on Wednesday to try to defuse an acrimonious power dispute between President Nicolas Maduro's government and the newly opposition-led National Assembly. Venezuela's Supreme Court had barred the three - plus a government legislator - from office pending a probe into alleged vote cheating in their jungle state Amazonas. But the opposition, which won control of the legislature in December's elections for the first time in 17 years of socialist rule, defiantly swore the three in anyway. However, the opposition majority has approved a letter from the three asking to leave the legislature pending resolution of the election dispute. National Assembly President Henry Ramos Allup said: “They have asked to be disincorporated in order to defend themselves legally and stop this Supreme Tribunal maneuver from making National Assembly activity futile”. Legislator Hector Rodriguez, who heads the pro-government parliament group, said "The Constitution and the motherland's group have triumphed". He added that the pro-government parliament group wanted to produce new evidence of vote buying in Amazonas state involving opposition Governor Liborio Guarulla. (Reuters, http://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-politics-idUSKCN0UR1UF20160113; Bloomberg, http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-01-13/venezuelan-congress-backs-down-in-conflict-with-supreme-court; Latin American Herald Tribune, http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=2403416&CategoryId=10717; El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/160113/deputy-rodriguez-the-constitution-and-pro-govt-deputies-have-won); and more in Spanish: (. (Ultimas Noticias, http://www.ultimasnoticias.com.ve/noticias/actualidad/politica/impugnados-piden-ser-desincorporados.aspx#ixzz3x7U91Wpw)

 

Congress Speaker: Venezuela's crisis cannot be overcome under this government

From the Federal Legislative Palace, the seat of the Venezuelan National Assembly, Congress Speaker Henry Ramos Allup has insisted that opposition deputies are committed to meet the main goals they have outlined in Parliament, namely, "promoting an amnesty law, recovering the Executive Power and proposing a democratic formula to terminate this government." "Presently in Venezuela, looking at the future is looking into the darkness. If mistakes are not corrected, a catastrophe will ensue. We believe the crisis the country is going through cannot be overcome under this government. There are many constitutional ways to oust (President Nicolás) Maduro," said Ramos Allup in an interview. Ramos Allup remarked "the answer to a democratic proposal cannot be snatching." He recalled that when former President Carlos Andrés Pérez was impeached and ousted, “public powers worked; he was removed and there was no bloodshed in the country." (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/160113/congress-speaker-venezuelas-crisis-cannot-be-overcome-under-this-govt)

 

Nicolás Maduro will deliver his 2015 State of the Union at the National Assembly on Friday, as established by Article 237 of the National Constitution. The event is scheduled for 10 A.M. (Veneconomy, http://www.veneconomy.com/site/index.asp?ids=44&idt=46610&idc=1)

 

Opposition presents property bill for beneficiaries of housing programs

Julio Borges, leader of the opposition coalition within the National Assembly, has presented bill granting the title deed to the beneficiaries of the government’s housing programs. "Not only do those families not own those houses, but they are victims of political abuse," he said. He termed "false" the number of dwellings the government said it has completed since the welfare program started to date. "Venezuela needs to build three million dwellings to fill the gap." (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/160113/opposition-presents-property-bill-for-beneficiaries-of-housing-mission)

 

Venezuela's first lady says her nephews were kidnapped by U.S.

First lady Cilia Flores on Tuesday said two of her nephews who have been indicted on drug trafficking charges were kidnapped by U.S. authorities, her first comments on the case since their arrests sparked a scandal last year.

Franqui Flores de Freitas, 30, and Efrain Campo Flores, 29, were arrested in Haiti in November in an operation involving the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA). The two were later indicted in New York on charges of conspiring to traffic cocaine, an embarrassment to President Nicolas Maduro. "We have evidence that the DEA was here on Venezuelan territory violating our sovereignty and committing crimes on our territory," said Flores, who is also a congresswoman, when asked about the issue by reporters at the legislature. (Reuters, http://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-drugs-idUSKCN0UR04P20160113; El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/160113/first-lady-cilia-flores-accuses-dea-of-kidnapping-her-nephews)

 

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.

Tuesday, November 18, 2014

november 18, 2014


International Trade

 

Cargo that has arrived at Puerto Cabello:

  • Over 2200 tons of powdered whole milk from SANCOR Argentina to the CASA government agency.
  • Over 1,000 tons of scotch whisky, in 56 containers from Diageo in the United Kingdom to the Venezuelan Foreign Trade Corporation (CORPOVEX)
  • Over 612 tons of margarine from Bunge Brazil, for CASA.
  • Over 184 tons of milk in 10 containers from NESTLE Argentina to NESTLE Venezuela.


 

 

Oil & Energy

 

Venezuela oil price tumbles to 4 year low

Venezuela's Ministry of Energy and Petroleum reports that the average price of Venezuelan crude sold by Petroleos de Venezuela S.A. (PDVSA) during the week ending November 14 fell to its lowest price since 2010. According to figures released by the Ministry, the average price of Venezuelan crude sold by Petroleos de Venezuela S.A. (PDVSA) during the week ending November 15 was US$ 70.83, down US$ 1.97 from the previous week's US$ 72.80. (Latin American Herald Tribune, http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=2360977&CategoryId=10717; Veneconomy, http://www.veneconomy.com/site/index.asp?ids=44&idt=41887&idc=4; El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/141114/venezuelan-oil-basket-down-to-usd-7083-per-barrel)

 

Iran, Venezuela urge oil price support ahead of OPEC meeting

OPEC hawks Iran and Venezuela have called on fellow crude producers to shore up prices that have plunged more than 30% to four-years low ahead of an OPEC meeting later this month. Oil prices have fallen to below US$ 79 on abundant and weak demand from US$ 115 a barrel in June. Skepticism that OPEC will cut supply when it meets on Nov. 27 have also weighed on the prices. So far, only Kuwait and Iran have said a reduction is unlikely, while a Libyan OPEC official, Venezuela and Ecuador have called for OPEC to cut output. (Reuters, http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/11/15/us-iran-venezuela-oil-idUSKCN0IZ0N420141115)

 

OPEC to 'increase coordination' in face of oil price fall, says Ramírez

Foreign Minister Rafael Ramirez said the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries will increase coordination in the face of the fall in oil prices, without elaborating. The oil market is waiting to see whether OPEC will agree a cut in production at its Nov. 27 meeting to stem the roughly 30% drops in oil prices since June. "We will be united in terms of putting forth a common policy," said Ramirez, who until September was both oil minister and head of state oil company PDVSA. (Reuters, http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/11/17/venezuela-opec-idUSL2N0T71SC20141117; El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/141117/ramirez-the-fall-in-oil-prices-also-has-political-considerations)

 

Foreign Minister Ramírez to discuss oil decline with Russia, says US$ 100 per barrel is desirable price

Foreign Minister Rafael Ramírez will arrive on Saturday in Moscow in the context of a tour across member countries of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) that has taken him to Algeria and Qatar.
Ramírez will meet with the President of Russian oil giant ROSNEFT, Igor Sechin. "A hundred dollars per barrel is the desirable price for Venezuela," and it stood at US$ 115 in June, said Ramírez during his visit in Iran on Saturday.
(El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/141114/venezuelan-fm-ramirez-to-discuss-in-russia-oil-decline)

 

PDVSA signs oil supply contract with Russia's ROSNEFT

Russian oil giant ROSNEFT says it has signed a new oil and byproducts supply agreement with Venezuelan state-run oil company Petróleos de Venezuela (PDVSA). Pursuant to the agreement, PDVSA would provide more than 1.6 million tons of oil and nine million tons of byproducts to ROSNEFT for five years. (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/141117/venezuelas-pdvsa-signs-oil-supply-contract-with-russias-rosneft)

 

Paraguaná refining center restarts operations

State-run oil company Petróleos de Venezuela (PDVSA) issued a press release reporting that the main crude oil processing units, and production of blends for gasoline and diesel in the Paraguaná Refining Center (CRP), Falcón, northwest Venezuela, are fully operational, following the power failures registered over the last few days. (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/141114/paraguana-refining-center-restarts-operations)

 

 

Commodities

 

Government expects 18% increase in food production in 2015

José Luis Berroterán, Minister for Agriculture and Land, expects Venezuela to produce 25 million tons of food from agriculture next year, an increase of 18% over 2014. He adds that this will depend on climate conditions and particularly "not having a drought like this year".  More in Spanish: (Infolatam, http://www.infolatam.com/2014/11/17/venezuela-preve-aumentar-en-un-18-su-produccion-de-alimentos-en-2015/)

 

 

Economy & Finance

 

Venezuela faces ‘revised view’ from Fitch as oil prices sink

Venezuela faces a “revised view” from Fitch Ratings in coming months on concern President Nicolas Maduro isn’t moving fast enough to bolster the nation’s finances amid an oil plunge. Fitch lowered Venezuela’s rating in March to B, or five steps below investment grade, with a negative outlook as accelerating inflation and slowing growth spurred street protests. At the time, oil prices were high and the government could still find funding at low levels, said Erich Arispe, director of sovereign ratings for Latin America at Fitch. (Bloomberg, http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-11-14/venezuela-faces-revised-view-from-fitch-as-crude-oil-prices-sink.html)

 

Business warns that inflation will reach 120% unless steps are taken

Jorge Roig, President of Venezuela's main business association, FEDECÁMARAS, warns that 2015 inflation could reach 120% if the government does not take steps including fiscal adjustments. Roig was pessimistic about the economic forecast for next year: "I am amazed that anyone thinks 2015 can be good", he said, and called for "economic rationality". Roig says this was the year for economic decisions since there have been special powers in the hands of President Maduro. "Are you going to take them next year, with a political cost, facing elections?", he said addressing Maduro.  More in Spanish: (Infolatam, http://www.infolatam.com/2014/11/18/patronal-venezolana-advierte-que-si-toman-medidas-inflacion-llegara-120)

 

Maduro approves proposal to adjust gasoline prices


 


 

Underemployment stands at 40.5%

The employment rate in the informal sector of economy here has grown this year than in the formal sector, according to the September labor force report prepared by the National Statistics Institute (INE). According to the figures, in September, 13,924,988 million people were employed in Venezuela, with 7,934,988 people working in the formal sector versus 5,384,599 underemployed. The share of the formal sector in the labor market dropped from 60.7% to 59.5% in a year time since September 2013. For its part, the informal sector grew from 39.3% to 40.5%, according to the INE. (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/141117/underemployment-stands-at-405-in-venezuela)

 

 

Politics and International Affairs

 

SPECIAL REPORT: Falling oil prices put Nicolás Maduro in a vice

Venezuelan oil, the lifeblood of the leftist revolution entrusted to Maduro by the late Hugo Chávez, was worth US$ 97 a barrel then. Now it’s middling around US$ 70, and with every dollar it dips, Venezuela’s export-dependent, popularity-challenged government loses US$ 700 million a year. With the money pot shrinking, Maduro’s approval rating has slumped to 30%, according to recent surveys, down from 55% in April 2013. The supermarket scarcities and unchecked crime that fueled the protests earlier this year are as bad as ever. Loath to adopt austerity measures that would hit his softening support base, Maduro has been borrowing money from Wall Street at usurious rates, with the country’s plunging benchmark bonds hitting a six-year low last week. All of this has left friends and enemies alike wondering how long the government can go on until something snaps, especially if oil prices slip further. Venezuela’s desperate attempts to get fellow OPEC states to cut production have failed to sway the mighty Saudis. The cliff seems closer than ever. “It’s as if Maduro is playing one of those zombie video games,” said analyst Luis Vicente Leon, director of the leading polling firm DATANALISIS. “As the zombies come at him, he shoots one here, another there, but more and more keep arriving until they’re on top of him.” Stalking Maduro are Venezuela’s long-festering core problems — collapsing productivity and Chávez-era currency controls that have pushed inflation to 63%, one of the world’s highest rates. New lines of credit from the world’s other big lender, Beijing, aren’t likely, with China growing frustrated with Venezuelan mismanagement, said Francisco Monaldi, a Venezuelan economist who is a visiting professor at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government. Maduro can still keep fiscal calamity at bay, analysts say, but he’s shown little appetite for the unpalatable political moves that it will require. His government could sell off valuable assets, particularly the U.S. gasoline retailer CITGO and its affiliated network of refineries and pipelines. He could also further cut subsidized oil shipments to key allies such as Cuba and Nicaragua. The most obvious measures for Maduro to take, and those likely to have the most meaningful fiscal impact, would fall hardest on the poor Venezuelans who revered Chávez but have grown skeptical of his understudy. Maduro has refused to devalue Venezuela’s currency, the bolivar, instead setting up a complex exchange system with three separate rates for U.S. dollars. The base rate is 6.3 to the dollar. The tourist rate is 12. Then there’s a third rate meant for importers and other businesses that trades at 50 bolivars to the dollar. But on the black market, where most of the money moves, a dollar is now worth 120 bolivars, double its value from earlier this year. When Venezuela’s finance minister said last week that the government had no plans to devalue the bolivar, the currency dropped 20% almost overnight. There’s no painless fix. Adjusting Venezuela’s currency controls to bring the bolivar in line with the black market value of the U.S. dollar could be politically disastrous for Maduro, since it would further slash the wages of Venezuelans who don’t have their savings stockpiled in U.S. bank notes. A more palatable move may be a long-deferred hike of the world’s lowest gas prices — equivalent to less than a penny per gallon. The giveaway costs the government approximately US$ 7 billion a year, and amounts to a huge subsidy for the wealthier Venezuelans who favor gas-gulping SUVs. Yet Maduro has shown little inclination to ask his supporters for sacrifices. “With Chávez they were willing to do it because they thought the future would be better,” said Leon, the DATANALISIS president. “With Maduro, it’s not clear that’s the case.” Instead, Maduro is channeling Santa. He announced a new “Happy Holidays” campaign this month, ordering retailers to sell Barbie dolls at huge discounts and set up a military-run appliance sale where shoppers line up for 80 percent markdowns on microwaves, computer tablets and other big-ticket items. Such fire sales have become a magnet for “re-sellers” who can easily flip the goods on the black market. The government’s fiscal profligacy is compounded by a kind of paralysis at the top levels, where internal battles are said to rage between those urging greater discipline and more radical Chávez followers who want the government and the military to take over more of the economy. “The top leaders of the government are more like a collective,” said Dimitris Pantoulas, a Caracas-based political analyst who is close to current and former government insiders.“It’s not like before when it was only Chávez.” At the top with Maduro is National Assembly President Diosdado Cabello, a powerful figure with closer ties to the military. With a Jacobean touch, the dour Cabello and other top government figures this month have taken to the airwaves to denounce anti-Chávez “infiltrators” within the ruling United Socialist party. “The enemy who most harms us is the enemy within our ranks,” said Francisco Ameliach, a high-ranking socialist party member and state governor. He tweeted a hotline number and a Gmail address for reporting any traitorous activity. (The Washington Post, http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/falling-oil-prices-put-venezuelas-nicolas-maduro-in-a-vice/2014/11/16/5c157066-6602-11e4-ab86-46000e1d0035_story.html)

 

Occupied businesses to be placed under one authority, militias in companies to be expanded

President Nicolás Maduro has approved a proposal by a pro-government workers congress, to put all occupied and nationalized companies under a single system directed by economist Juan Arias. He also approved the creation of a "workers militia" as a part of the Bolivarian Militia, and orders an expansion of militias in companies. More in Spanish:
(El Mundo,
http://www.elmundo.com.ve/noticias/economia/laboral/claves---las-propuestas-aprobadas-por-maduro-en-el.aspx#ixzz3JPiDmicY, http://www.elmundo.com.ve/noticias/economia/politicas-publicas/gobierno-anuncia-medidas-economicas-de-cara-al-210.aspx, http://www.elmundo.com.ve/noticias/economia/banca/gobierno-crea-el-banco-bicentenario-del-pueblo.aspx; AVN; http://www.avn.info.ve/contenido/crean-banco-bicentenario-clase-obrera-mujer-y-comunas)

 

Spain's PODEMOS leader Pablo Iglesias says López case may harm the party

Pablo Iglesias, leader of Spanish political party PODEMOS, believes that the request for his help made by Lilian Tintori, wife of imprisoned Venezuelan opposition leader Leopoldo López, could be a political maneuver to harm the new Spanish leftist political organization. "I believe the aim of that request is to harm PODEMOS," Iglesias said, and also commented that Tintori could have been manipulated, DPA reported. (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/141117/podemos-leader-pablo-iglesias-lopezs-case-may-harm-the-party)

 

Venezuelan migration is constrained in MERCOSUR

The Venezuelan government has not endorsed the "Agreement on residence for nationals of the Member States of the Common Market of the South – Mercosur, Bolivia and Chile." As a result, Venezuelans cannot benefit from the special migration regulations within the regional bloc, which provide for provisional residence of up to two years, or permanent residence, upon presentment of the passport and a confirmation of the lack of criminal records. (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/141115/venezuelan-migration-is-constrained-in-mercosur)

 

 

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.