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 Seniat. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Seniat. Show all posts

Thursday, February 4, 2016

February 04, 2016


International Trade

 

Panama seeks to renew negotiations on Venezuela’s debt

Panama is seeking to renew negotiations with Venezuela over the repayment of a multimillion dollar debt by local importers with Panamanian companies, including exporters in the Colón Free Trade Zone. Negotiations over the debt – which is over US$ 1 billion according to official Panamanian data – began in August 2013 and have stretched out for different reasons. Panamanian Trade and Industry Minister Augusto Arosemena reports his government has asked Venezuela’s Finance Ministry to renew talks on repayment. More in Spanish: (El Nacional, http://www.el-nacional.com/economia/Panama-reactivar-negociacion-Venezuela-empresas_0_787121326.html)

 

 

Oil & Energy

 

Venezuela has been importing US oil since the second quarter of 2015

Crude oil imports from the United States to Venezuela "is nothing new, because Venezuela has been purchasing light oil since the second quarter of 2015, not only from that country, but also from Nigeria and Algeria," says economist and oil expert Rafael Quiroz. "Regrettably, Venezuela is still dependent on oil (...) If our production declines, we just enter into crisis," he added. Quiroz explained that regular oil production in Venezuela, which is based on light, medium, and heavy oil, "is dropping, and the only production that is growing is that of the oil found in the Orinoco Oil Belt, which is extra heavy”, and said explained that Venezuela does not have enough light oil to mix it with extra heavy oil, which is a required procedure to upgrade and use that heave crude oil. (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/160203/expert-venezuela-imports-oil-since-the-second-quarter-of-2015)

 

Russia's ROSNEFT, Venezuela's oil minister discussed coordination to stabilize oil markets

Igor Sechin, the head of Russia's top oil producer ROSNEFT, and Venezuelan oil minister Eulogio Del Pino have discussed this week possible joint efforts aimed at global oil markets stabilization, ROSNEFT said in a statement. It also said they had discussed cooperation in oil marketing within the existing contracts between ROSNEFT and Venezuela's state-run oil company PDVSA. (Reuters, http://www.reuters.com/article/russia-rosneft-venezuela-idUSR4N15C00R)

 

 

Commodities

 

POLAR reports their corn production is at 100%, other plants are failing

POLAR’s CEO Lorenzo Mendoza reported that POLAR’s corn production is at 100%, but that out of 32 plants nationwide some are down to 0% productivity and “we see supply failures on the horizon which must be resolved by the government by allocating FOREX”. He said paralyzed plants include a tuna producing facility in Mariguitar (Sucre state), the tuna can production plant in Valencia (Carabobo state), which also affects the Yukery fruit juice operation; the Las LLaves soap and detergent plant is also paralyzed. “There are many plants but the list of those out of service is growing and the only thing we are lacking are basic supplies. Some productive facilities are at 30% and 70% capacity, but we seek lack of supplies on the horizon”. More in Spanish: (Ultimas Noticias, http://www.ultimasnoticias.com.ve/noticias/actualidad/economia/mendoza-asegura-que-plantas-de-maiz-de-empresas-po.aspx#ixzz3z6JJeVXN)

 

OREO stops tracking Venezuela sales over economic mess

Venezuela's chaotic economy is crushing the company that makes America's best-selling cookies. OREO-maker Mondelez reported US$ 778 million losses on Wednesday from its business in Venezuela. The business climate there is so chaotic that Mondelez said it will continue to sell oreos and other products in Venezuela but has written off that business. In other words, it won't count any of Venezuela sales in its results going forward. Mondelez isn't alone. In October, PEPSI reported US$ 1.4 billion losses in Venezuela and also wrote off its business there, even though it plans to continue selling its drinks and snacks in the country. It's not just snacks and sodas either. FORD, CITIGROUP, ORACLE, IBM and AMERICAN AIRLINES have all noted the tough business climate and their exposure to Venezuela's currency collapse in the past year. (CNN: http://money.cnn.com/2016/02/03/news/economy/venezuela-oreos-mondelez-loss/)

 

Venezuela is unprepared to face “El Niño” climate impact

According to Saúl Salas, coordinator of Venezuela’s Society of Agronomic Engineers, the nation is unprepared to anticipate, prevent and lessen the impact of “El Niño” on agriculture here, and could aggravate food scarcities in the country. He challenged the official claim that scarcities are due to “El Niño”, and said the country has not made proper use of its water due to a lack of public policies and investment in infrastructure such as dams, reservoirs, irrigation systems, and others. He adds that “40% of the population does not receive water on a regular basis”. More in Spanish. (Ultima Hora Digital; http://ultimahoradigital.com/venezuela-no-esta-preparada-para-frenar-impacto-del-fenomeno-el-nino/)

 

 

Economy & Finance

 

Black-market bolivars crash past 1,000 per dollar in Venezuela

Venezuela’s bolivar fell past 1,000 per U.S. dollar in the black market as world’s fastest inflation erodes the value of the nation’s currency. That means that the country’s largest denomination note of 100 bolivars is now worth less than 10 U.S. cents. The currency has declined 16.9% in the past month to 1,003 bolivars per dollar, according to dolartoday.com, a website that tracks trading in street markets where Venezuelans go to skirt limits on foreign-exchange purchases. The government maintains official rates of 6.3, 13.5 and about 200 bolivars per dollar for authorized purchases of items deemed essential. The bolivar is collapsing because the government keeps printing more money and the slump in oil prices means Venezuela is running out of dollars. The amount of cash in circulation or held in bank accounts in Venezuela has doubled from a year earlier, spurring the threat of hyperinflation. The country may face a US$ 38 billion shortfall in its dollar income this year, analysts at Credit Suisse Group AG wrote in a note to clients on Wednesday, meaning a default on government debt is a real possibility this year. (Bloomberg, http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-02-03/venezuela-bolivar-falls-through-1-000-per-dollar-in-black-market)

 

Inflation-wrought Venezuela orders bank notes by the planeload

Millions of pounds of provisions, stuffed into three-dozen 747 cargo planes, arrived here from countries around the world in recent months to service Venezuela’s crippled economy. But instead of food and medicine, the planes carried another resource that often runs scarce here: bills of Venezuela’s currency, the bolivar. The shipments were part of the import of at least five billion bank notes that President Nicolás Maduro’s administration authorized over the latter half of 2015 as the government boosts the supply of the country’s increasingly worthless currency, according to seven people familiar with the deals. And the Venezuelan government isn’t finished. In December, the central bank began secret negotiations to order 10 billion more bills, five of these people said, which would effectively double the amount of cash in circulation. (The Wall Street Journal: http://www.wsj.com/articles/inflation-wrought-venezuela-orders-bank-notes-by-the-planeload-1454538101

 

National Productive Economy Council considering FOREX, gasoline and price adjustments

Former Chavez Finance minister Rodrigo Cabezas, who is part of the newly created National Productive Economy Council, says the group is considering matters such as the exchange rate, gasoline price, prices controls and import substitutions, and adds it is essential that the opposition Democratic Unity Conference should put forth it’s proposal for a new economic model. More in Spanish: (Ultimas Noticias, http://www.ultimasnoticias.com.ve/noticias/actualidad/economia/cabezas-en-los-proximos-dias-anunciaran-medidas-fi.aspx#ixzz3z6J7Hdld)

 

BOFA fears next economic steps by Venezuela will not be enough

Bank of America/Merrill Lynch expects the government here to take a number of economic steps within the next few days, but believes they could be insufficient to view of the nation’s huge economic imbalances. “We expect the government to announce some economic policy adjustments, including an increase in domestic gasoline prices and an important devaluation in the official exchange rate within the next few days. Although such changes can surprise the market in a positive way, it is unlikely these steps will approach the main economic changes necessary to stabilize Venezuela’s economy”, it said in a report to clients. The report says “incomplete” adjustments will fuel further inflation and that economic contraction will persist until more important economic policy changes are undertaken. More in Spanish:  (El Mundo, http://www.elmundo.com.ve/noticias/economia/banca/bank-of-america-teme-que-medidas-para-venezuela-se.aspx#ixzz3zC8PRGjc; Últimas Noticias, http://www.ultimasnoticias.com.ve/noticias/actualidad/economia/bank-of-america-teme-que-medidas-para-venezuela-se.aspx)

 

Oil woes could make Venezuela restructure China debt

Venezuela may need to restructure its oil-linked Chinese debt before undertaking any similar move with its international bondholders, BARCLAYS said in a report on Tuesday. The nation is widely believed to be headed for a credit event thanks to the dramatic tumble in oil prices, which has wreaked havoc on the Venezuelan economy. BARCLAYS said Venezuela is falling short of the daily oil shipments to China that it uses to repay loans from Beijing, as the fall in prices has raised the number of barrels needed. At current prices the country needs nearly 800,000 barrels a day to satisfy its loan payment, Barclays said - sharply up from the roughly 228,000 needed when oil was at US$ 100 per barrel.  "A restructuring of Chinese fund debt could be supportive for Venezuela," BARCLAYS analysts wrote. (Reuters, http://www.reuters.com/article/venezuela-debtrenegotiation-china-idUSL2N15H0YZ)

 

Venezuela may have `accidental' default this year, NOMURA says

The absence of decision-making capacity in Venezuela’s government is so acute that the country is likely to default by accident later this year, according to NOMURA International. The country’s cash shortage means it would need to cut imports by US$ 32 billion to almost zero this year in order to avoid running out of money, Siobhan Morden, the head of Latin American fixed-income strategy at NOMURA, wrote in a note to clients. The nation is dependent on imports for most consumer goods and it relies on oil exports to pay for those purchases. Should crude remain below US$ 30 a barrel, Venezuela won’t have enough money to meet the US$ 6.3 billion of bond payments the country and state-owned Petroleos de Venezuela SA have coming due in the second half of the year, according to Morden. She calculates that the minimum breakeven oil price for Venezuela is US$ 65 a barrel. (Bloomberg, http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-02-02/venezuela-may-have-accidental-default-this-year-nomura-says)

 

POLAR’S Mendoza says the “current crisis can be overcome with private investment

Lorenzo Mendoza, CEO of POLAR, the nation’s largest food producer, has proposed seven basis steps to restore the nation’s productivity: Renew access to international supplies and basic goods, obtain international financing, bolster domestic production, adjust price controls, make state run companies produce, assist vulnerable groups within the food system, and strengthen agricultural production in staples where Venezuela is competitive.  He adds that in a relatively short time Venezuela can again become self-sufficient in coffee, white corn, cocoa, rice, and sugar, among others. Mendoza said economic affairs in Venezuela are “a disaster”. He says public policies should not exclude social contributions and called for a “market economy” so that all Venezuelans may have equal opportunities according to their ability. He called on companies here to sacrifice and “bring patience” to reconstructing the economy. Mendoza added that Venezuela's economic issues need to be tackled in a transparent manner, focusing on plummeting agriculture production, hurdles to imports, and the search for new funding sources. He stressed that there are excellent farmers in the states of Portuguesa, Guárico, Aragua, Cojedes, Barinas, and Anzoátegui who used to provide Polar with large amounts of corn, one of the main raw materials the company requires. "All that went downhill and nowadays, almost 40% of the corn consumed has to be imported. We depend on imports carried out by the State," he commented. The government’s Planning and Knowledge Minister Ricardo Menéndez quickly retorted that Mendoza had not been included in the National Productive Economy Council because “he has a double standard.” (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/160203/ceo-of-polar-highlights-importance-of-venezuelan-farmers); and more in Spanish:  (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/160203/la-actual-crisis-se-supera-con-inversion-privada; Ultimas Noticias, http://www.ultimasnoticias.com.ve/noticias/actualidad/economia/lorenzo-mendoza-presento-propuestas.aspx; http://www.ultimasnoticias.com.ve/noticias/actualidad/economia/menendez-al-consejo-de-economia-fueron-invitados-a.aspx#ixzz3zCA3FAzN; El Nacional, http://www.el-nacional.com/economia/Mendoza-tiempo-ciudadano-quiere-comida_0_786521561.html; http://www.el-nacional.com/economia/Lorenzo-Mendoza-propone-economia-mercados_0_787121469.html)

 

 

Politics and International Affairs

 

Former Chavez ministers seek probe into US$ 300 billion in lost oil revenue

Two former cabinet ministers under late President Hugo Chavez are seeking an investigation to trace the fate of some US$ 300 billion allegedly embezzled during the past decade through a complex currency control system. Hector Navarro, who ran five ministries under Chavez's rule, will ask a state ethics council to review the operations of the 13-year-old exchange control mechanism that opposition leaders have described as a "corruption machine." Navarro and Jorge Giordani, a former finance minister who was Chavez's closest economic adviser during his 14-year rule, have made calculations showing the government cannot account for how it spent nearly a third of the US$ 1 trillion that entered its coffers in the past decade.  "A gang was created that was only interested in getting their hands on financial resources, on (the country's) oil revenue," Navarro, who helped found the ruling Socialist Party but was expelled in 2014, said in an interview. "Thieves have no ideology," said Navarro, who continues to describe himself as a revolutionary despite his open criticism of the ruling party.  He did not elaborate on who was responsible for the funds having gone missing and or who might have embezzled them.  Navarro and Giordani are seeking an investigation by an agency known as the Republican Moral Council, which is made up of the chief prosecutor, the state ombudsman and the national comptroller. The three are widely considered to be close to the ruling Socialists. Opposition leaders have echoed many of Navarro and Giordani's criticism but also have pilloried them for helping create and maintain the state-led economic model that is now struggling with soaring inflation and chronic product shortages. (Reuters: http://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-politics-idUSKCN0VB26F)

 

Economic authorities fail to appear in Congress

The authorities of the Central Bank of Venezuela (BCV), National Center for Foreign Trade (CENCOEX), and the Finance Ministry have again failed to appear at the National Assembly (AN). The Standing Committee on Foreign Policy of the Assembly reported that these authorities requested their visits to be rescheduled, without providing further details. The purpose of their appearance was to discuss the delays in the delivery of FOREX to Venezuelan students abroad, who have complained about this situation for the past few years. (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/160203/venezuelan-economic-authorities-fail-to-appear-in-congress)

 

National Assembly rejects tax proposal by SENIAT

The National Assembly’s Finance Committee has rejected a request by the SENIAT tax authority to adjust the Tax Unit used for measuring taxes, rates and fines at 177 VEB. Committee Chairman Alfonso Marquina said the proposal was sent back because it does not comply with the rules set for establishing the Tax Unit, which requires an official publication of inflation and price indexes for the entire 2015, by the Central Bank and the National Statistics bureau. More in Spanish: (Ultimas Noticias, http://www.ultimasnoticias.com.ve/noticias/actualidad/economia/an-devuelve-al-seniat-propuesta-para-nueva-tasa-de.aspx#ixzz3zC9pCSLH)

 

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.

 

Thursday, January 21, 2016

January 21, 2016


International Trade

 

Venezuela may have lost around US$ 7 billion due to closure of its border with Colombia

Lady Gómez, an opposition legislator from southwestern Táchira reports that the five months since the Colombia-Venezuela border was closed "have led to a Customs, commercial, and industrial blockade, which has deprived the country stop of tax revenues over US$ 7 billion from border customs...Today, we are witnessing increased smuggling, stopped industry and commerce, and an economic impact against the National Treasury. Formal customs economy, which generates income for the State for the country's development, is being replaced with an informal economy," Gómez explained. (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/160120/usd-7-billion-may-have-been-lost-after-colombia-venezuela-border-closu)

 

Uruguayan farmers, dairy producers protest over Venezuela's debts

Uruguayan milk producers and farmers blocked traffic on Tuesday during an unprecedented demonstration against a generalized raise in taxes and fees, demanding payment of products sold to Venezuela. "There is a trade agreement. The dairy industries sent products to Venezuela, yet money never appeared," Uruguayan dairy producer Marcos Algorta argued. The governments of Uruguayan and Venezuelan Presidents Tabaré Vásquez and Nicolás Maduro, respectively, signed an agreement in 2015 under which Uruguay would pay out oil debts with Venezuela, and Caracas would buy US$ 300 million in food as of December last year. (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/160120/uruguayan-farmers-dairy-producers-protest-over-venezuelas-debts)

 
 

Oil & Energy

 

Venezuela's call for emergency OPEC meet gets doubtful response

Venezuela has requested that OPEC hold an emergency meeting to discuss steps to prop up oil prices, which have fallen to their lowest since 2003, two OPEC sources said on Wednesday. But four other delegates from countries in the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries said such a meeting was unlikely to happen. OPEC's Gulf members including Saudi Arabia have opposed earlier calls for emergency meetings. "Venezuela has requested an extraordinary meeting," said an OPEC delegate from a Middle East member-country. Another OPEC source confirmed that such a request had been made. (Reuters, http://www.reuters.com/article/us-opec-venezuela-idUSKCN0UY1O2; Bloomberg, http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-01-20/venezuela-said-to-request-emergency-opec-meeting-amid-oil-slump; El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/160120/venezuela-calls-for-emergency-opec-meet-as-oil-prices-keep-dropping)

 

Guyana grants prospecting licenses to oil companies in Essequibo region

Guyana's Ministry of Natural Resources granted a prospecting license to the Tullow Guyana and Eco Atlantic oil companies within the Orinduik block, which is 1,802 square kilometers and is located off the Essequibo coast, a region in dispute with Venezuela. A representative of the ministry added that both oil companies are partners in this agreement, which is initially valid for four years, although it may extend for up to 10 years. The Essequibo region is under UN mediation since the signing of the Agreement of Geneva in 1966, but the dispute heightened when oil giant ExxonMobil found last may oil deposits in waters off the disputed area. (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/160120/guyana-grants-prospecting-licenses-to-oil-companies-in-essequibo-regio)

 
 

Commodities

 

Military strategic command now reports scarcities up to 91% in Western Venezuela

The Strategic Operational Command of the Western Strategic Total Defense Region has reported a survey taken last month which shows scarcities of 59 to 91% in 17 key basic products: Coffee, detergents, sanitary napkins were 91% scarce in visited establishments, the most acute scarcity was reported in the Lara, Falcon, Yaracuy and Zulia states. Beef was 82% short, up to 89% in Falcon state, and 14% in Zulia. More in Spanish: (El Nacional, http://www.el-nacional.com/economia/CEO-reporto-escasez-basicos-occidente_0_778122404.html)

 

Venezuela needs urgent foreign medical aid, pharmaceutical group says

With scores of medicines in short supply due to a severe financial squeeze, Venezuela is suffering a "humanitarian crisis" and requires rapid international assistance, according to a major pharmaceutical association. The Venezuelan Pharmaceutical Federation listed 150 medicines, from those for hypertension to cancer, as well as basics such as prophylactics and antibiotics, which are scarce in the OPEC nation of 29 million people. "The national government must accept we are in a humanitarian crisis in the health sector, with patients dying across our territory for lack of medicines," said association president Freddy Ceballos in a statement. (Reuters, http://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-health-idUSKCN0UY25R)

 

Six canning operations closed down in Sucre state due to lack of tuna

Roger Palacios, Secretary General of the Alimentos Polar Marigüitar labor union, and food area coordinator for the National Workers Union, reports that some 10,000 workers will become unemployed and 6 canning operations in Sucre state will shut down before the month is up. He says the plants need at least 6,000 tons of tuna to process at 25% capacity. “This is the worst scenario for companies in Sucre in the past 18 years, there is no tuna, the fishing fleet is paralyzed, and it is expected ship owners will sell their vessels”. More in Spanish:  (El Nacional, http://www.el-nacional.com/economia/atun-lata-cierre-empresas_0_778722233.html)

 

National Assembly calls on government to meet water supply crisis

A unanimous resolution by the National Assembly has called on the Eco-Socialism and Health Ministries to face the water supply crisis, identify contaminated areas and enact short, medium and long term contingency plans to solve the nationwide supply crisis. The proposal was brought forth by opposition legislator Ylidio de Abreu, of Carabobo state, who reported that over the past 18 years only 2 reservoirs have been built, and asked that water desalinization plants be set up on the coast to ameliorate the problem. More in Spanish: (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/160120/an-insta-al-gobierno-a-paliar-la-crisis-del-agua)

 
 

Economy & Finance

 

Oil rout raises fears of Venezuela debt default

Slumping crude prices have investors bracing for a messy default in Venezuela, where the sovereign and state-owned oil company PDVSA have some US$10 billion in external debt payments due this year. With crude hovering around US$ 28 per barrel, Venezuela - which on Wednesday reportedly requested an emergency OPEC meeting - could have trouble satisfying its obligations. Barclays said the country will have difficulty avoiding a credit event in 2016 - and that is based on the bank's forecast of US$ 37 oil, almost US$ 10 higher than current prices. That sentiment seems to be widely shared in the market, even though President Nicolas Maduro assured the National Assembly last week that Venezuela would continue to pay what it owes. "It is a question of when, not if," said Russ Dallen, a partner at Latinvest in Miami, referring to the possibility of a default. (Reuters, http://www.reuters.com/article/venezuela-bonds-idUSL2N1540UK)

 

U.S. companies likely to take further big hits from Venezuela economic turmoil

A slew of major U.S. corporations is likely to announce in the next few weeks whether they will take big write-downs for their troubled Venezuela operations, and some may say they are leaving the country altogether. The companies may decide to slash the valuations of their businesses and take charges based on declines in some of the oil producing nation’s four exchange rates for the bolivar currency, of which three are official and one black market, and then deconsolidate the operations on their balance sheets, Wall Street securities analysts said. The Reuters analysis shows that U.S. companies with exposure could face total write-downs of more than US$3 billion if they revalue their assets in Venezuela using the less preferential SIMADI exchange rate of nearly 200 bolivars to the dollar. In the past, many companies valued their assets using the main official rate of 6.3 bolivars per dollar. But even that change may not reveal the full extent of the problem given that the black market exchange rate has worsened to about 878 bolivars to the dollar from about 190 bolivars a year ago, according to dolartoday.com, a website that tracks the rate. They may have more reason to accelerate the process after the socialist government on Friday declared a 60-day economic emergency, which would give President Nicolas Maduro wider powers to intervene in companies or limit access to already scarce dollars in Venezuela. GOODYEAR said in recent financial disclosures that a deconsolidation move would trigger a one-time, pre-tax charge of more than US$ 500 million and what it termed “derecognition” of US$ 293 million of cash on its balance sheet. So far, blue-chip companies that have deconsolidated in Venezuela and written off nearly all of their investment there include PROCTER & GAMBLE, PEPSICO and FORD. Among those who have departed altogether is cleaning products maker CLOROX. One major pressure point could be drug companies. ABBOTT, ABBVIE, MERCK, PFIZER and ZOETIS have about US$ 1.8 billion in combined net monetary assets exposed to the bolivar, recent U.S. regulatory filings show. Other companies selling sensitive products, such as baby formula maker MEAD JOHNSON, have had to adjust their practices because of constraints placed by the Venezuelan government on the release of U.S. dollars to repatriate cash back to the United States. Consumer products maker NEWELL RUBBERMAID has been identified by some Wall Street analysts as the next major U.S. company that will likely take action to protect itself from Venezuela's crumbling economy. If NEWELL were to deconsolidate it would take a one-time charge of US$ 111 million, according to company commentary in recent U.S. regulatory filings. Among U.S. companies, OREO cookies and CADBURY chocolate maker has one of the largest remaining exposures to Venezuela, with US $617 million in net assets, according to the Reuters analysis of corporate disclosures. 3M, COLGATE PALMOLIVE and HERBALIFE have at least raised the specter of insulating their financial results from Venezuela. Toy maker MATTEL has said it may consider ceasing operations in Venezuela. (Reuters: http://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-companies-venezuela-insight-idUSKCN0UX1EM)

 

Council for a Productive Economy sworn in as authorities reject “neoliberal” solutions to crisis

President Nicolas Maduro has sworn in 45 people who will comprise the National Council for a Productive Economy in order to "face the crisis the oil-seeking model is going through and provide shared responses that help develop productive forces," he said. Executive Vice-President Aristóbulo Istúriz and Productive Economy Minister Luis Salas will head the body, whose first working session will take place on Wednesday. Vice-Minister of Investment for Development Simón Zerpa will be in charge of the work agenda. The economic body will be composed of president of the Central Bank of Venezuela (BCV) Nelson Merentes; economists Juan Arias and Rodrigo Cabezas; head of aluminum company Guayana's Venezuelan Corporation (CVG) Justo Noguera Pietri; and the president of CANTV state telecommunications company Manuel Fernández, and includes several business representatives. At the meeting, Vice President Aristobulo Istúriz said the government will avoid a "neoliberal" solutions to the economic crisis, adding that he was confident that the new plan will repair the national economy, which is in an official state of 'emergency'. "We are obliged to build a productive model that allows us to generate wealth and simultaneously maintain and deepen the gains of the people," he told a group of entrepreneurs. (Latin American Herald Tribune, http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=2403786&CategoryId=10717; El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/160120/venezuelas-council-of-productive-economy-sworn-in; http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/160120/venezuelas-maduro-lines-to-buy-foodstuffs-are-a-wound-in-social-life)

 

Venezuela: a nation in a state

The price of oil, which provides 95% of Venezuela’s foreign-exchange earnings, has long dictated the popularity of its leaders. The government's income from oil in the year to November 2015 was two-thirds lower than during the same period the year before. The oil price has fallen further since then. With less money coming in and demand for imports still strong, the value of Venezuela's foreign-exchange reserves has dropped alarmingly. A fall during 2015 in the price of gold, of which Venezuela has substantial holdings, has contributed to the decline in reserves. The current oil slump would be painful, whoever was in power. The regime has greatly compounded the damage with policies that, though designed to favor the poor, end up impoverishing them and the state. Price controls—along with the shortage of foreign exchange—have led to acute shortages of basic goods, forcing people to queue for hours to buy necessities. Inflation is officially running at 141% as of September last year (the latest available figure). Analysts believe the true figure is at least 200% a year; some predict hyperinflation in 2016. The massive budget deficit, which the Central Bank finances by printing money, contributes to that risk. The sharp recession is undermining one of the regime's proudest claims: that under its rule Venezuela's poverty has fallen. In January 2016 Maduro appointed a new economics team, but there are doubts about its willingness to tackle the nation's troubles. The minister in overall charge of the economy, Luis Salas, is a left-wing sociologist who, like others in the government, attributes the country's problems to an "economic war". He rejects some basic tenets of conventional economics, for example that printing too much money causes inflation. (The Economist: http://www.economist.com/blogs/graphicdetail/2016/01/graphics-political-and-economic-guide-venezuela)

 

Venezuela paid out US$ 27 billion in foreign debt over 16 months

President Nicolas Maduro has announced that over 16 months, Venezuela has paid US$ 27 billion in principal and interest on the foreign debt. He said the Venezuelan government has complied "first and foremost with the homeland" and also with the obligations of the Republic, which have been met and will continue to be met. (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/160119/venezuela-paid-usd-27-billion-in-foreign-debt-in-16-months; http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/160119/maduro-venezuela-faces-a-crisis-that-threatens-stability)

 

Kenneth Rapoza says Venezuela default imminent, Chavez legacy rests in pieces

Venezuela has been on default watch for months. Its credit rating is already in the gutter, at CCC at Standard & Poor’s. With oil now US$ 20 lower than it was when the S&P made that call, a default is no longer a question of if, but when. A recent emergency economic decree is likely too late to save anyone but president Nicolas Maduro. After two years of inaction and the recent decline in oil prices, Barclays Capital analyst Alejandro Arreaza said a “credit event” in 2016 is “increasingly difficult to avoid.” In other words, oil major PDVSA and the government it bankrolls is going bankrupt. With oil under US$ 30, Venezuela would need to use 90% of PDVSA’s oil export revenue to meet debt obligations to local and foreign creditors. Figures released Wednesday by the Central Bank of Venezuela show that foreign currency reserves were just around US$ 20 billion in the third quarter, but by the end of November they hit just US$ 14 billion, the lowest ever. Net assets are also seen shrinking to around US $24 billion, roughly US$ 10 billion less than a year ago. Considering current oil prices, any reasonable additional import cuts may be insufficient to cover the financing gap. Maduro keeps reiterating his government’s willingness to pay its debts, but his anti-Yankee rhetoric and is hardline against multinationals there makes him hard to believe. The official position shows a lack of understanding of the magnitude and roots of the crisis, making for this default to be the biggest Latin America has seen since Argentina’s in 2001 and its more strategic default on the same debt in 2014. (FORBES: http://www.forbes.com/sites/kenrapoza/2016/01/20/venezuela-default-imminent-chavez-legacy-rests-in-pieces/)

 

Politics and International Affairs

 

Full National Assembly to debate on Economic Emergency decree tomorrow

National Assembly President Henry Ramos Allup announced that the Legislature will hold a full debate on President Maduro’s proposed Economic Emergency Decree in plenary session this Friday, January 22nd.  According to Venezuelan law, both the Legislature and the Supreme Tribunal have up to 8 days to take a stand on the petition by the Executive. The Supreme Tribunal has promptly declared the proposed decree is “constitutional”. The Assembly is calling in the heads of the Central Bank, SENIAT (tax collection), Foreign Trade Center (CENCOEX), PDVSA and the Nutrition Ministry for questioning in audiences open to the media, The ministers called stalled their scheduled morning appearance to late afternoon today, and sought to have media excluded from the hearings.(El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/160120/presidents-of-central-bank-and-pdvsa-summoned-by-parliament; and more in Spanish: (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/160120/decreto-de-emergencia-decidira-este-viernes-la-an; El Nacional, http://www.el-nacional.com/economia/Directivos-Seniat-BCV-Cencoex-AN_0_778122317.html; El Mundo, http://www.elmundo.com.ve/noticias/actualidad/noticias/tsj-declara-constitucional-decreto-de-emergencia-e.aspx; AVN; http://www.avn.info.ve/contenido/tsj-declara-constitucional-decreto-emergencia-econ%C3%B3mica; El Nacional, http://www.el-nacional.com/politica/TSJ-constitucional-Decreto-Emergencia-Economica_0_778722295.html)

 

Deputy Guerra says Venezuelan crisis is not due to oil price drop

Opposition Deputy José Guerra, who heads the Committee that is evaluating the Economic Emergency Decree drafted by President Nicolas Maduro, has said that Venezuela’s economic crisis is not due to the fall in oil prices. "This crisis, which began in 2013, is not a consequence of the drop in oil prices, for prices back then stood at US$ 110 per barrel and ended at a high price that year. In January-June 2014, prices hit US$ 101 (per barrel), and the economy tumbled. Plummeting oil prices did not spark off the crisis we are facing today," says Guerra. (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/160120/deputy-guerra-denies-that-venezuelan-crisis-is-due-to-oil-price-drop)

 

Legislator says proposed Economic emergency decree can lead to bank account freeze

Elias Matta, a legislator from the opposition coalition and member of the Special Committee considering President Maduro’s proposed Economic Emergency Decree says article 4 of the decree opens the door to a “corralito” or freeze on private bank accounts. He says the Parliament will assess "why the decree allows the government to manage the remaining balance of Fiscal Year 015 and spend it without the approval of the National Assembly (AN). It is worrisome that items that do not exist in the 2016 budget can be created and spent in any way." (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/160120/deputy-economic-emergency-decree-can-lead-to-bank-account-freeze)

 

FEDECAMARAS says proposed Economic Emergency Decree “can make the situation worse

Venezuela’s main business federation, FEDECAMARAS says the proposed Economic Emergency Decree “could make the already precarious situation in Venezuelan homes even worse”. It adds that “the government has had and has in its hands legal powers to make the necessary corrections with no need for economic emergency decrees”. FEDECAMARAS says the proposed decree does not face the nation’s economic problems, which require “a thorough economic plan, within an institutional framework that promotes a strong, stable, productive and innovative economy”. (Ultimas Noticias, http://www.ultimasnoticias.com.ve/noticias/actualidad/economia/fedecamaras-dice-que-la-emergencia-economica--pued.aspx#ixzz3xmPjmPu1)

 

Lopez’ wife and mother report harassment and child abuse during jail visit

Lilian Tintori and Antonieta Mendoza, the wife and mother of jailed opposition leader Leopoldo López, have reported to the special office on gender violence at the Prosecutor General’s office, that they were seriously mistreated in the presence of Lopez’s 3 and 6 year-old children. They report that as they visited the opposition leader at the Ramo Verde military jail near Caracas, they were forced to strip naked and inspected in their intimate parts in the presence of the children, by order of Colonel Viloria. Ms. Tintori told media that “I want an investigation, they should go to Ramo Verde and investigate the military…they should tell all that happened there, demand the videos, there are cameras everywhere in Ramo Verde”. She added that “I don’t trust military authorities at Ramo Verde, the Colonel is an accomplice of Diosdado Cabello (Vice President of the ruling PSUV party and former National Assembly President), the orders come directly from Nicolas Maduro and Diosdado Cabello because this is what we are told at that jail each time we ask where the orders come from”, she said. Ms. Mendoza said that, after being forced to strip in the presence of her grandchildren, two female sergeants “tried to touch” Lopez’ 6 year-old daughter, Manuela. She said López has spoken to his lawyer and “is indignant”, adding that “this happens in other jails”, and this is not an isolated case. More in Spanish: (Infolatam, http://www.infolatam.com/2016/01/21/esposa-de-leopoldo-lopez-denuncia-ante-fiscalia-hostigamiento-en-la-carcel/)

  

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, April 7, 2015

April 07, 2015


International Trade

 

Cargo that has arrived at Puerto Cabello

  • 14,528 tons of beef, chicken and powdered milk in 441 containers from Brazil's JBS for state agency CORPOVEX
  • 2,147 tons of powdered milk and margarine in 80 containers from Brazil for CASA
  • 440 tons of security valves in 24 containers, from China for state agency CORPOELEC
  • 92 tons of auto parts in 11 containers of auto parts from Ford Motor USA for Ford Motor Venezuela.
More in Spanish: (Notitarde; http://www.notitarde.com/La-Costa/Mas-de-16-mil-toneladas-de-alimentos-llegaron-al-puerto-local-2385807/2015/04/06/504989/)

 

 

Logistics & Transport

 

6 new carriages for the Los Teques Metro arrived at La Guaira port

Land Transport and Public Works Minister Haiman El Troudi has announced that 6 new carriages for the Los suburban Los Teques Metro have arrived at La Guaira's port, for a new train linking Caracas and the satellite city. More in Spanish: (AVN; http://www.avn.info.ve/contenido/arribaron-al-puerto-guaira-6-nuevos-vagones-para-metro-teques-0)

 

 

Oil & Energy

 

Maduro will propose a constitutional ban on "fracking" in Venezuela

President Nicolás Maduro says he will propose a "constitutional prohibition" of fracking in Venezuela. More in Spanish: (El Mundo, http://www.elmundo.com.ve/noticias/petroleo/pdvsa/maduro-propondra-prohibicion-constitucional-del-fr.aspx#ixzz3WWMeQCad)

 

Harvest Natural Resources is planning a restructuring after the Venezuelan government blocked its plans to sell assets it still has in that country. The American crude oil and natural gas producer said it had had a restriction to liquidity due to PDVSA not paying dividends and failing to comply with other parts of their contract. It explained it is in talks with PDVSA to try to reach a friendly way out of PetroDelta where the company has a 20% stake. (Veneconomy, http://www.veneconomy.com/site/index.asp?ids=44&idt=43326&idc=4)

 

 

Economy & Finance

 

FOREX reserves down 13% in March to US$ 20.973 billion from US$ 24.176 billion at the beginning of the month. More in Spanish: (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/150406/que-esta-pasando)

 

Gold reserve "swap" may happen soon

The Central Bank is reported to be negotiating a swap using 1.4 million troy gold ounces of its reserves as 4 year collateral for US$ 1.5 billion. More in Spanish: (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/150406/operacion-swap-de-oro-es-factible-en-el-corto-plazo)

 

Canadian Gold Reserve reports a request to declare default against Venezuela in a Washington court (1st District of Columbia). After an arbitration process that concluded in September 2014, the court ruled Venezuela had to pay the mining company US$740 million. Gold Reserve filed a motion to have the ruling executed last November to no avail. Venezuela must pay over US$ 2.8 billion for the different cases of expropriation of assets in the country. (Veneconomy, http://www.veneconomy.com/site/index.asp?ids=44&idt=43339&idc=2)

 

Venezuelan tax authority exceeds collection goal by 54%

The Venezuelan Customs and Tax Administration Service (Seniat) says it has exceeded by 54% its income tax collection goal for the first quarter this year. Income tax collection totaled VEB 60.23 billion (US$ 9.56 billion) versus a goal of VEB 39.10 billion (US$ 6.2 billion), according to a communiqué issued by SENIAT.  It received over 3.5 million tax returns, a surge of over 1,100,000 returns from January-March 2014, which is regarded as a success in the expansion of the tax base. (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/150406/venezuelan-tax-authority-exceeds-collection-goal-by-54)

 

Tribunal dismisses VENOKLIM lubricants case against Venezuela

A World Bank tribunal has thrown out an arbitration case pitting Netherlands-incorporated motor lubricants company Venoklim against Venezuela over a 2010 nationalization. The International Center for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID) said on Friday that Venoklim is ultimately owned by Venezuelans and thus did not qualify for arbitration as a foreign company. "The tribunal dismissed the case for lack of jurisdiction," wrote Venezuela's lawyer George Kahale of Curtis, Mallet-Prevost, Colt & Mosle LLP in an e-mail to Reuters on Monday. "Claimant said (the compensation sought) was a substantial amount, but the case did not reach the stage for it to specify how much." (Reuters, http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/04/06/us-venezuela-arbitration-idUSKBN0MX17G20150406)

 

 

Politics and International Affairs

 

CARICOM supports Guyana in border dispute with Venezuela

The Caribbean Community (CARICOM) supported Guyana in its border dispute with Venezuela, arguing that the Arbitral Award of 1899 is valid. The 15 countries comprising the Caricom rejected a communiqué by the Venezuelan Ministry of Foreign Affairs and published in several Caribbean newspapers, in which Venezuela contended that the Arbitral Award of 1899 was null and void. CARICOM says the award "definitively settled the boundary between the two countries." (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/150406/caricom-supports-guyana-in-border-dispute-with-venezuela)

 

FOREIGN POLICY: Busting myths about the latest U.S. sanctions on Venezuelans

A significant number of cognoscenti have labeled President Obama's recent sanctions on seven Venezuelans a “mistake,” one that is likely to embolden Maduro instead of weakening him. Don’t believe it. There’s zero evidence that the sanctions are helping Maduro in any way. If anything, they’re hurting him. Part of the uproar over the Executive Order has to do with its harsh language. The document calls the situation in Venezuela “an unusual and extraordinary threat to the national security and foreign policy of the United States,” and declares “a national emergency to deal with that threat.” This was done in order to invoke the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, which allows the White House to impose sanctions on individuals. This tough wording did not sit well with Latin American governments. Most of them have expressed support for Venezuela and called for the order’s repeal. Maduro is hoping to make this a major issue at the upcoming Summit of the Americas and has embarked on a drive to collect signatures for a national petition protesting the U.S. measures. But the frenzied objections from Caracas are just hot air. Judging by his overreaction, Maduro is terrified of further sanctions. He’s doing his best to convince everyone that sanctions are making him stronger, and attempting to dissuade the international community from imposing further penalties on corrupt members of his clique. The sanctions do not affect ordinary Venezuelans in any way. By making life hard on those in charge of implementing orders from above, and who also happen to be the people least likely to have taken precautions to protect themselves — the sanctions may well cause serious cracks in the governing coalition. Venezuelans don’t seem to be buying into Maduro’s hysterics because they have more serious problems to worry about. There have been numerous reports of people being coerced to sign. Public servants are being forced to do so, as are schoolchildren; and signatures are being demanded in exchange for hard-to-find items, such as chickens sold at government grocery stores. If the sanctions were a boon to the Venezuelan government’s standing with its own population, you’d think that it would have been happy about the announcement from Washington. Yet this doesn’t explain why Venezuelan officials spent months lobbying against the implementation of the sanctions. Maduro is trying to scare Obama from going any further and has even said that, if the sanctions go away, Venezuela stands ready to work with the U.S. There is no basis to conclude that sanctions are helping Maduro. If they were, he’d be welcoming them. Instead, he’s acting like a man under siege, doing his best to bully Obama into repealing them. That is a clear sign that they’re hurting. (Foreign Policy, http://foreignpolicy.com/2015/04/02/busting-myths-about-the-latest-u-s-sanctions-on-venezuelans-caracas-maduro-obama/)

 

US does not plan to discuss Venezuela at Summit, disappointed at lack of Latin American support

US Assistant Secretary of State for Latin America Roberta Jacobson has said "I see no reason to talk about a specific country" at the upcoming Summit of the Americas in Panama. She also expressed disappointment that more Latin American governments did not help Washington clarify that the sanctions imposed are not directed against Venezuela's government or its economy. Jacobson also said President Barack Obama plans only for one separate meeting, and that is with his Panamanian host Carlos Varela. More in Spanish: (El Heraldo, http://www.elheraldo.co/internacional/ee-uu-no-piensa-abordar-tema-de-venezuela-en-cumbre-de-las-americas-de-panama-190038)

 

Former presidents denounce "alteration of democracy" in Venezuela

Nineteen former Ibero-American presidents denounced the "alteration of democracy" in Venezuela through the so-called Panama Declaration, which will be presented next April 9, ahead of the seventh Summit of the Americas to be held in Panama. According to the FAES foundation, whose chairman is former Spanish President José María Aznar, the undersigned asked the participants of the Summit to join efforts to find an "alternative" to solve the Venezuelan crisis, Efe highlighted. (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/150406/former-presidents-denounce-alteration-of-democracy-in-venezuela)

 

Colombia's Santos deplores US sanctions against Venezuelan officials

Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos rejected the sanctions levied by his US counterpart Barack Obama against seven Venezuelan government officials, and called for talks among the different local political factions. In an interview he said: "We have always said that unilateral sanctions are counterproductive in the long run, hence we deplore them." (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/150406/colombias-santos-deplores-us-sanctions-against-venezuelan-officials)

 

Peruvian minister: no comments about Venezuela's situation

Pedro Cateriano, the Chairman of the Council of Ministers of Peru, said that it would be wrong "to intervene in Venezuela's internal affairs" when he was asked whether the government of President Ollanta Humala should adopt a more critical stance towards the government of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro. (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/150406/peruvian-minister-no-comments-about-venezuelas-situation)

 

Rajoy hopes for "good relations" with Venezuela

Spain's President Mariano Rajoy says he hopes to have "good relations" with Venezuela, although he also said that he would like to see Venezuelan dissenters Leopoldo López and Antonio Ledezma "out of prison". In an interview, Rajoy recalled that he has met with the wives of both dissenters in his capacity and added: "There is no reason for them (López and Ledezma) to be in prison." (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/150406/rajoy-hopes-to-have-good-relations-with-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.