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 Tibisay Lucena. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tibisay Lucena. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 27, 2018

February 27, 2018


Oil & Energy

PDVSA makes unusual offer of 4 cargoes of heavy crude for sale in Euros in March

Venezuela’s state-run oil company PDVSA has launched tenders to sell on the open market up to four cargoes of heavy crude for March delivery at its Jose and Puerto Miranda terminals, according to document seen by Reuters on Monday. The offers, which are unusual as PDVSA typically sells all its exports through long-term supply contracts, include two 600,000-barrel cargoes of Morichal 16 crude and two 200,000-barrel cargoes of Tia Juana Pesado (TJP) crude.  The Morichal 16 crude is for delivery March 1-23, and the TJP crude will be loaded on March 21-30. Payment must be made in euros three days before the loading window, according to the tender’s terms. The TJP crude must be exported to the U.S. West, East or Gulf Coasts, Northwest Europe or the Mediterranean. The Morichal crude can also be exported to Asia. Bids will be accepted through Feb. 27, indexed to Brent crude front month prices. PDVSA earlier this month offered to sell 2 million barrels of diluted crude oil (DCO), also for March delivery.  (Reuters: https://af.reuters.com/article/commoditiesNews/idAFL2N1QG13Y)

 

U.S. ban on key oil material could further choke Venezuelan production

The outlook for declining oil production in Venezuela may get grimmer if the U.S. bans supply of a key commodity used to help Venezuelan crude flow from oilfields to the coast. Production in the Orinoco oil belt, which accounts for half of the country’s output, depends on heavy naphtha imported from the U.S. to reach global markets. Naphtha is used as a diluent to reduce the viscosity of Venezuela’s tar-like extra-heavy oil, and help it flow through 62 miles of pipelines to the nation’s coast, where it can be either upgraded or exported. The U.S. has already imposed sanctions on more than a dozen top Venezuelan officials and now may target oil trades. Venezuela imports about 2 million barrels of heavy naphtha per month, and all of it comes from U.S. Gulf refiners, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Oil production in the Orinoco oil belt, responsible for half of Venezuela’s crude oil production of currently around 1.6 million bpd, depends on the imports of this heavy naphtha from the U.S., which is blended with the thick tar-like extra-heavy oil to allow it to flow through pipelines from Orinoco to Venezuela’s coasts for loading onto tankers. According to analysts, while a U.S. ban on Venezuelan oil imports could hurt U.S. refiners, restrictions on U.S. oil product exports to Venezuela could push Venezuela’s oil production off the cliff. In case of restrictions on U.S. exports to Venezuela, this country would have to either pay more for naphtha from other sources or see its oil production fall more steeply than predicted. (Bloomberg, https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-02-26/u-s-ban-on-key-oil-material-could-choke-venezuelan-production; Oil Price: https://oilprice.com/Energy/Crude-Oil/Venezuelan-Oil-Production-Could-Further-Collapse-On-New-US-Sanctions.html)

 

The Venezuelan oil industry is on a cliff’s edge. Trump could tip it over.

The Trump administration is threatening to embargo Venezuelan oil, a potentially ruinous blow to the Saudi Arabia of South America. But here in the home of the world's largest crude reserves, Venezuela is killing its largest industry all on its own. Speculators once joked that all it took to strike oil on the vast plains of eastern Venezuela was a guy with a shovel. These days, the socialist government cannot seem to make the industry work. This vast extraction site near the eastern town of Punta de Mata, which once churned out 400,000 barrels of oil a day, is a tableau of hungry, idle workers and broken rigs. The site about 280 miles east of Caracas, the capital, has been partly paralyzed since last summer. Of its 30 drills, only six work, in large part because of a lack of maintenance and spare parts. With time on their hands, many oil workers are functioning as security guards. And with good reason. The crude-heavy countryside is a lawless, bandit-ridden land. Three hours south of this industrial town, a gang of thieves recently raided another drilling site run by PDVSA, the state-owned oil giant. They tied up work crews and stole their cellphones before swiping air conditioners and kitchen appliances from company trailers. In Venezuela, corruption, a lack of investment and a flight of expertise in the all-important oil sector have finally come to a head.  Last month, according to a report from the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, Venezuela's plummeting oil production hit a three-decade low of 1.6 million barrels a day, a 20% drop from January 2017 and less than half of what it was in the 1990s. The state oil company is run by Manuel Quevedo, a military general with no industry experience, after a purge last fall of executives seen as not wholly loyal to President Nicolás Maduro. Oil revenue accounts for 90% of the government's hard currency. About 40% of Venezuela's production goes to China and Russia to repay loans or is gifted to chief ally Cuba.  That has made Venezuela's nemesis — the United States — its single-largest cash buyer.  PDVSA is so broke that creditors have been seizing shipments of Venezuelan oil off the coast of Curacao and other Caribbean islands. Should the U.S. government cut off Venezuela, that action could bring the country closer to a large-scale debt default that could turn the nation into an economic pariah. With less to lose, experts say, Maduro could potentially kick out the Western oil companies that still do business here, seizing their assets. For now, PDVSA is on its knees. Guillermo Morillo, a former PDVSA manager who is working on a recovery plan for the company, said it would take as much as US$ 100 billion in investment to bring production back to 2009 levels. (The Washington Post: https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/the_americas/the-venezuelan-oil-industry-is-on-a-cliffs-edge-trump-could-tip-it-over/2018/02/24/1c8d6350-0b62-11e8-998c-96deb18cca19_story.html)

 

Congressman says US investors aim to take control of CITGO from ROSNEFT

National Assembly opposition representative José Guerra says a group of US investors are seeking to take control over ROSNEFT’s 49% share in CITGO, to avoid Russia’s state-owned company from entering the US market in the event of a full default by PDVSA. He claims this is extremely serious to the interest of the Venezuelan oil industry. (NTN24:  http://www.ntn24.com/noticia/diputado-jose-guerra-advierte-que-inversionistas-de-ee-uu-buscan-tomar-control-de-las-acciones-de-166143)

 

Maduro claims Venezuela will recover 70% of oil output decline

President Nicolas Maduro has promised Venezuela will recover 70% of the country’s lost oil production in the first half of 2018. Venezuela’s oil production dropped by nearly 13% last year according to figures released by OPEC in January, hitting a 28-year low that suggested a deepening economic crisis and increased chances of a debt default.

Venezuela produced 2.072 million barrels per day (bpd) in 2017 compared with 2.373 million bpd the previous year, registering a near 300,000 bpd drop. (Reuters, https://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-economy/venezuelas-maduro-says-to-recover-70-percent-of-oil-output-decline-idUSKCN1G9016)

 

Economy & Finance

Reports show only 5 buyers for the “Petro”, while Maduro claims 171015 certified offers received

According to reports on the ETHERSCAN web page, only five buyers have acquired Venezuelan “Petros” as US$ 100 million in transactions took place since the new cryptocurrency was launched by the Maduro regime. ETHERSCAN shows only two users bought 99,9995% of the total amount. A third buyer bought 0,0005% in Petros, and the two remaining buyers bought minimal amounts.  Yet in a speech Monday, President Nicolás Maduro claimed the Petro has received 171015 certified purchase orders since it was launched on February 20th.  He says the offers came from 87284 users, including 3523 from companies around the world and the rest from individuals. More in Spanish: (AVN, http://www.avn.info.ve/contenido/petro-recibi%C3%B3-171015-ofertas-compras-certificadas; Venepress; https://venepress.com/article/Solo_5_tenedores_han_comprado_Petro_desde_su_presentacion1519510973826)

 

Venezuela may limit new crypto exchange launches

Venezuela's government may move to restrict the number of cryptocurrency exchanges that will be able to operate domestically. According to a ten-page manual published last week as part of a set of releases related to the country's newly-launched cryptocurrency, the Petro, as few as eight exchanges may be initially approved to operate in the market. The document, released on Feb. 20, details the requirements by which local crypto exchanges must operate. It suggests that the cap will exist at the outset, under the auspices of Venezuela's cryptocurrency superintendent, before going on to say that the government may modify the limit after the first 90 days of the exchanges' operations. Sources with knowledge of the ongoing process in Venezuela say that the cap may be more restrictive in practice. It remains to be seen how many exchanges launch in Venezuela within its newly minted regulatory framework. Likewise, it's not clear which exchanges are in active talks with the Maduro government. (Coindesk: https://www.coindesk.com/venezuela-may-move-limit-new-crypto-exchange-launches/)

 

Venezuela and Russia may be collaborating on cryptocurrency

Venezuelan and Russian government officials met last week in Moscow to discuss the launch of Venezuela's new petro cryptocurrency. The terms of the meeting remain unclear, but it seems that Russian officials have taken an interest in Venezuela's state-backed digital currency. What are the implications for a potential collaboration? And what might that collaboration even look like? It remains unclear exactly what role, if any, Russia's government will play in the development or proliferation of the petro. A Russian company called Aerotrading has already been linked with the petro cryptocurrency projectWhether or not the international community accepts the petro remains to be seen. (Investopedia: https://www.investopedia.com/news/venezuela-and-russia-are-working-together-cryptocurrency/#ixzz58H1zEdDl)

 

Poland refutes reports of its interest in Venezuela’s oil-backed cryptocurrency

Poland’s Ministry of Finance has refuted reports that it is interested in the petro, the Venezuelan ”oil-backed” currency. Earlier this month, Venezuela reportedly claimed that a handful of countries have expressed interest in receiving the petro for commerce with Venezuela such as Norway, Denmark, Brazil, Vietnam, Poland, and others. Polish publication Gazeta “asked the [Polish] Ministry of Finance if this was true and what value it would have to have [for] such a transaction and when it could be carried out,” the publication wrote. The finance ministry replied: “The Ministry of Finance did not receive any letter in this matter…Cryptocurrencies are not issued or guaranteed by the central bank or other state institutions. Therefore, they are not legal tender or currency, they cannot be used to pay tax liabilities and are not widely accepted at commercial and service outlets.” The Polish Ministry of Foreign Affairs also answered the news outlet’s questions about the country’s possible support of Venezuela’s cryptocurrency. “According to the knowledge of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Poland did not report interest in transactions with the use of petro cryptocurrency,” the foreign ministry clarified. The Venezuelan government claimed last week that it has raised more than $1 billion from the petro’s pre-sale in just two days, although some doubt that Venezuela has raised money at all with its new currency. (Bitcoin: https://news.bitcoin.com/poland-interest-venezuelas-oil-backed-cryptocurrency/)

 

US Senator calls for crackdown on Venezuela’s Petro

Insisting that Venezuela's new oil-backed cryptocurrency is an extension of credit to the regime of President Nicolás Maduro, US Senator Robert Menéndez has urged Washington to take further action against the Petro. The Democrat brought up the subject during a Senate hearing held by the Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs. During that hearing, Commodity Futures Trading Commission chairman J. Christopher Giancarlo said his agency "would watch carefully" for signs that Venezuela may be using the Petro to circumvent sanctions against Maduro’s government. Menendez’ attack on the Petro came after its launch last Tuesday. In January, Democrat Menendez and his Republican colleague Marco Rubio wrote a letter to US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin expressing their disapproval of the Petro. The two senators told Mnuchin: "We are concerned that a cryptocurrency could provide Maduro a mechanism by which to make payments to foreign lenders and bondholders in the United States, actions that would clearly thwart the intent of US imposed sanctions.” For its part, the Treasury Department has warned all investors and citizens in the US against investing in the Petro for otherwise they will face sanctions themselves. (Cryptovest: https://cryptovest.com/news/us-senator-calls-for-crackdown-on-venezuelas-petro/)

 

OP-ED: The blockchain won't save Venezuela

The promise of cryptocurrency was supposed to be trustless decentralization: You trust the thing because of objective certainties embedded in its open-source code, not because some authority tells you to. Meanwhile the petro is just the opposite. For one thing, you can't trust the code; in fact Venezuela's government can't even get its story straight on what sort of code it is: Investors will have to overlook confusion about how the currency will operate. The white paper says the Petro is built on the Ethereum network, while the user guides the government published says it’s on the Nem network. Also, this cryptocurrency is supposed to "promote well-being, bringing power closer to the people" but you can't buy it with Venezuelan bolivars. The reasons for this are obvious: The petro is not a currency, crypto or otherwise, but a way to raise hard currency externally now that Venezuela is cut off by sanctions from accessing the international debt markets. So, the petro is just a way to hide new international debt behind a thin screen of blockchain. (Bloomberg, https://www.bloomberg.com/view/articles/2018-02-25/venezuela-s-petro-cryptocurrency-won-t-help-debt)

 

Politics and International Affairs

White House debates new punishments for Venezuela as April elections approach

The White House has put a possible oil embargo against Venezuela back on the table as Trump administration insiders debate how to respond to Venezuela's planned April elections, already dubbed by Washington as “illegitimate.” The White House, National Security Council, State Department, and Treasury Department among other agencies are studying and talking with advisers about a range of options to help drive President Nicolas Maduro from office. That includes a full embargo, prohibiting any Venezuelan oil being sold in the United States, or blocking sale of oil related products to Venezuela, according to U.S. administration officials and advisers. The administration is also considering sanctions against Diosdado Cabello, who is seen as Venezuela's second most powerful leader and head of the ruling socialist party, noting that Canada has already sanctioned the former military chief for human rights violations. “The message is we will continue to ratchet up the pressure until the Maduro regime is removed and democracy is returned to Venezuela,” a senior administration official told McClatchy. Trump has an “escalatory road map” that aides have drawn up that outlines the available economic and individual sanctions meant to strangle Venezuela’s economy. But Trump, so far, has stopped short of applying the so-called “nuclear option” – oil sanctions – that could starve the oil-dependent Caracas government of desperately needed cash during a spiraling economic and humanitarian crisis. Trump has taken a personal interest in this crisis and is “understandably impatient” for greater progress in Venezuela. (McClatchy: http://www.mcclatchydc.com/news/nation-world/article202267834.html; Latin American Herald Tribune, http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=2451582&CategoryId=10717; http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=2451493&CategoryId=10717)

 

European Union threatens Maduro regime with added sanctions

The European Union has threatened the Maduro regime with additional sanctions if it does not guarantee transparent presidential elections on April 22nd. After meeting with the group’s foreign ministers, EU Foreign Affairs Commissioner Federica Mogherini said all political parties should be able to participate and have equal access to media, she also called for a reform of the pro-regime National Elections Council (CNE) that allows it to be recognized by all political parties. More in Spanish: (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/politica/1015/union-europea-amenaza-al-gobierno-venezolano-con-nuevas-sanciones---#)

 

OAS calls on Venezuela to cancel snap presidential election

The Organization of American States (OAS) urged Venezuela to cancel the April 22 presidential election, citing a lack of transparency in the polls. In a resolution, a majority of OAS members pressed the Venezuelan government to carry out elections through a "fair, transparent, legitimate and credible" process, in which all political parties and candidates could participate. Samuel Moncada, Venezuela's ambassador to the OAS, rejected the resolution as soon as it was approved by the delegates. Moncada accused the OAS of trying to "strangle Venezuelan democracy," saying that the US had pressured members states to pass the resolution. The CNE opened up the process for candidate subscriptions on Saturday. So far, only a handful of potential candidates, mostly political outsiders, have announced campaigns against Maduro: businessman Luis Alejandro Ratti, the evangelical pastor Javier Bertucci and businessman Leocenis Garcia. Venezuela's main opposition alliance, the Democratic Unity Roundtable (MUD), announced earlier this week that it would boycott the election, although one of its high-profile members, Henri Falcon, has indicated his intention to run. (DW: http://www.dw.com/en/venezuela-electoral-authority-rejects-president-maduros-mega-elections/a-42727192)

 

Venezuelan opposition allegedly makes renewed push to delay presidential vote

Venezuela’s opposition has renewed private talks with the government in a bid to push back the date of the country’s presidential elections as President Nicolas Maduro’s administration seeks some legitimacy for the vote, according to people familiar with the matter. Two-time presidential candidate Henrique Capriles, former Governor Henri Falcon and lawmakers from two of Venezuela’s largest opposition parties have participated in the talks that began in Caracas, after the Democratic Unity Roundtable, or MUD, announced it would shun snap elections to protest an electoral system that is rigged to favor the ruling socialist party. Information Minister Jorge Rodriguez and head of National Constituent Assembly Delcy Rodriguez are said to have been among representatives from the government, two of the people said. The latest discussions center on setting a date later than April 22 for presidential elections, changing the leadership of the country’s electoral authority and allowing the presence of international observers, according to three sources with knowledge of the discussions, who aren’t authorized to speak publicly about the private meetings. Earlier talks in the Dominican Republic failed to culminate in an accord which prompted the pro-government electoral council to set the general election date much earlier than the opposition had wanted. Retired Captain Diosdado Cabello, Vice-president of the regime’s United Socialist Party, has insisted that the elections will not be postponed, (Bloomberg: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-02-26/venezuelan-opposition-is-said-to-make-renewed-push-to-delay-vote; and more in Spanish: (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/nota/1037/cabello-desestimo-rumores-que-apuntaban-a-cambio-de-fecha-de-las-presidenciales; http://www.el-nacional.com/noticias/oposicion/oposicion-exige-correr-presidenciales-para-julio_224675

 

Electoral Council won’t combine presidential, legislative elections

The president of Venezuela’s National Electoral Council (CNE), Tibisay Lucena, has dismissed the idea of holding legislative elections on the same day as the presidential election scheduled for April 22, as the ruling party has proposed.  The CNE will decide on a later date for the legislative and municipal elections. We’re not prepared at this time to hold joint elections,” Lucena said. She made that statement during a joint press conference together with the head of the ruling party’s National Constituent Assembly (ANC), Delcy Rodriguez. (Latin American Herald Tribune, http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=2451476&CategoryId=10717)

 

OP-ED: Venezuela's meaningless election

Venezuela will hold a presidential election on April 22. The winner has already been determined.

Last week, a coalition of opposition parties in Venezuela announced that they wouldn’t field a candidate to run against President Nicolas Maduro. It’s awfully hard to win an election when you don’t run. Opposition leaders declined to participate in protest of what they call unfair election conditions. Key figures are either imprisoned or banned from running for public office. And Venezuela’s opposition alliance, the Democratic Unity coalition, has been barred from fielding a coalition candidate, although its 20 individual parties are still free to do so. A few candidates have expressed interest. Perhaps most importantly, Maduro’s socialist allies control the country’s election commission, giving him free rein to manipulate the results. Impartial international observers will not likely be permitted to monitor the vote.  In other words, opposition leaders are right that the election isn’t fair. Not even close. Over the past year, Maduro has consolidated control over both the Constitutional Court and the National Assembly, giving him power over all three branches of government. He is Latin America’s newest dictator. And he will remain in power unless viable candidates are allowed to challenge him in a fair election. Since that doesn’t appear to be a possibility for the April 22 contest, the United States and its allies in the Western Hemisphere must vocally oppose that fraudulent election. The results must not be considered valid. Until free elections are held, Mr. Maduro must not be considered the legitimate president of Venezuela. (The Post and Courier: https://www.postandcourier.com/opinion/editorials/venezuela-s-meaningless-election/article_2838ab0e-1758-11e8-b973-d38e6de9f671.html)

 

Uruguay’s Foreign Minister says there are no guarantees for Venezuelan elections

Uruguay’s Foreign Minister, Rodolfo Nin Novoa, says conditions are not adequate for holding presidential elections in Venezuela: “Would Uruguay enter elections with jailed political leaders and a judiciary that takes orders from the Executive branch? Would it go into elections with banned political parties? I don’t think so. And what we don’t want for ourselves we don’t want for others. This is a call, not a demand that rests in Venezuelan hands”, he said – and rejected any call for military intervention in Venezuela. More in Spanish: (Noticiero Venevisión, http://www.noticierovenevision.net/noticias/internacional/canciller-de-uruguay-no-cree-que-hayan-condiciones-para-comicios-venezolanos; El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/politica/1022/canciller-uruguayo-apoya-pedido-de-la-oea-de-aplazar-elecciones-en-venezuela)

 

US welcomes military role in improving situation in Venezuela

In a recent interview, Todd Robinson, US Charge d’affaires in Venezuela, responded to a question on whether Venezuela’s Armed Forces should take a position on the current crisis, saying: “I would say we cannot afford the luxury of disqualifying any sector from a negotiation for a better Venezuela. The military holds a lot of influence over the nation’s future and if they can help we are not going to say no.”  Earlier, US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson says the Venezuelan military could become “agents for change”. Robinson added “I believe the Secretary of State is saying that if they can play a positive role in opening up politics, to create a more trustworthy environment to improve conditions, they are welcome”. More in Spanish: (Noticiero Venevisión, http://www.noticierovenevision.net/noticias/internacional/encargado-de-negocios-de-ee-uu-insiste-en-embargo-petrolero-y-golpe-militar-en-venezuela)

 

Arreaza tells UN there is no humanitarian crisis in Venezuela

Maduro’s Foreign Minister Jorge Arreaza has told the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva that there is no humanitarian crisis in Venezuela, saying: “They are trying to make the world believe there is a humanitarian crisis in Venezuela, an old trick of the United States. It is indispensable to the United States to revoke Venezuela’s democratic government to take over our mineral resources”, he said. More in Spanish: (Noticiero Venevisión, http://www.noticierovenevision.net/noticias/politica/canciller-arreaza-asegura-ante-la-onu-que-en-venezuela-no-hay-una-crisis-humanitaria; AVN, http://www.avn.info.ve/contenido/venezuela-denuncia-ante-onu-inadmisibles-acciones-intervenci%C3%B3n-eeuu)

 

'Migrate or die': Venezuelans flood into Colombia despite crackdown

The desert wind whipping their faces, hundreds of Venezuelan migrants lugging heavy suitcases and overstuffed backpacks trudge along the road to the Colombian border town of Maicao beneath the blazing sun. The broken line snakes back 8 miles (13 km) to the border crossing at Paraguachon, where more than a hundred Venezuelans wait in the heat outside the migration office. Money changers sit at tables stacked with wads of Venezuelan currency, made nearly worthless by hyperinflation under President Nicolas Maduro’s socialist government. The remote outpost on the arid La Guajira peninsula on Colombia’s Caribbean coast marks a frontline in Latin America’s worst humanitarian crisis. The Venezuelans arrive hungry, thirsty and tired, often unsure where they will spend the night, but relieved to have escaped the calamitous situation in their homeland. (Reuters, https://www.reuters.com/article/us-colombia-venezuela-migrants/migrate-or-die-venezuelans-flood-into-colombia-despite-crackdown-idUSKCN1GA1K9)

 

Venezuela’s middle class finds an open door in Peru

Structural reforms, fiscal discipline, rising commodity prices and an export-oriented mining sector have made Peru one of South America’s top performers over the last decade. The IMF projects 4% growth this year; the poverty rate is now less than half of what it was in 2005. A growing middle class has brought new consumers – and new opportunities for Venezuelan entrepreneurs with dwindling economic prospects at home. Peru’s open policy toward migration has also helped. In 2017, the government of Pedro Pablo Kuczynski, himself a descendant of immigrants, created the Permiso Temporal de Permanencia (PTP), a temporary residency permit that allows Venezuelans and others to look for jobs, apply for a tax number and receive some health and education services. Last year more than 26,000 Venezuelans applied for the program, and about 25,500 were accepted. So far, however, fewer than 500 of those have since sought work visas. On Jan. 30, the government rolled out a new residency category for Venezuelans whose PTP is about to expire and who have no police, criminal or judicial records. There are an additional 80,000 Venezuelans in Peru with tourist visas who could apply for the PTP, according to officials. (Americas Quarterly: http://www.americasquarterly.org/content/venezuelas-middle-class-finds-open-door-peru)

 

OP-ED: Venezuela's neighbors can't wait for Uncle Sam

Venezuela’s refugee crisis is metastasizing. According to the United Nations, 5,000 Venezuelans have fled to Curacao, 20,000 to Aruba, 30,000 to Brazil, 40,000 to Trinidad and Tobago, and more than 600,000 to Colombia. In times past, the U.S. has led in responding to exoduses sparked by political or humanitarian crises. Yet although the U.S. has put pressure on Venezuela to restore its democracy, the burden of coping with the implosion of what used to be Latin America’s richest nation has fallen most heavily on its immediate neighbors. They can’t afford to wait for a distracted and less benevolent U.S. to do the right thing. Instead, for their immediate and collective future, they must forge a regional response to what has become the hemisphere’s greatest humanitarian crisis. Top U.S. diplomats have called out Venezuela’s humanitarian plight and human rights abuses. But on his five-country trip to the region, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson focused more on building support for new sanctions than on addressing this more immediate catastrophe. The flood of people is already overwhelming border economies, schools, health systems and basic shelter in Colombia, Brazil and even Ecuador. Venezuela’s Caribbean neighbors, many with weak institutions and still recovering from last year’s hurricanes, are ill-equipped to meet such new challenges. Despite much cooperative rhetoric and nearly two dozen regional economic and diplomatic bodies, the countries and their foreign policy efforts remain quite solitary.  To galvanize a response, the region’s leaders should turn to the Inter-American Development Bank and World Bank to fast-track cheap loans for refugee-focused infrastructure. Latin America doesn’t need a new mechanism to pursue this more cohesive and comprehensive response — the recently created 14-country Lima group could suffice, and older diplomatic bodies desperate for a mission abound. Its nations need only to summon the will and leadership to pick up the regional humanitarian mantle. If they do so, it may then be the U.S.’s turn to follow. (Bloomberg: https://www.bloomberg.com/view/articles/2018-02-26/venezuela-s-refugee-crisis-needs-a-regional-response)

Tuesday, August 9, 2016

August 09, 2016


International Trade

MERCOSUR crisis continues as Venezuela holds onto chair, suspension or exclusion possible. MERCOSUR’s key founding members (Argentina, Brazil and Paraguay) are compiling a list of Venezuela’s compliance and non-compliance with requirements for qualifying an “associate member state”, and will review it later this week. Paraguay’s Foreign Minister Eladio Loizaga says there will be a new meeting of country coordinators on this matter with Uruguay on August 23rd; and added that Venezuela will have until then “to gain full membership into MERCOSUR”. He says Venezuela has failed to sign onto the MERCOSUR Protocol on Human Rights and comply with other economic requirements; and reported that the agenda for the next steps was set during a meeting of the Presidents of Argentina (Macri), Brazil (Temer) and Paraguay (Cartes) during the Rio Olympics. After that, Uruguay’s President Tabaré Vásquez said that Venezuela remains a member “as long as the democratic clause is not applied”, He added that his government will continue to bolster dialogue as "the best tool to find solutions” to the problems facing the Common Market of the South (MERCOSUR). At the same time, Paraguay has recalled its ambassador to Caracas after President Nicolas Maduro made disparaging remarks about Paraguay. Previously, Venezuelan Foreign Minister Delcy Rodriguez had unilaterally raised the MERCOSUR flag in Caracas and said her country will not allow Argentina, Brazil and Paraguay, the so-called “the triple alliance,” to “take by assault” the pro tempore presidency, which she claims is now to be fully exercised by Caracas. She quoted a statement by the chair of the Committee on Economic Affairs of the Brazilian Senate, a supporter of deposed President Dilma Rousseff, who rejected the decision by that country’s interim government. (Latin American Herald Tribune, http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=2418177&CategoryId=10717; Reuters, http://www.reuters.com/article/us-paraguay-venezuela-idUSKCN10G1W9; (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/noticias/daily-news/uruguay-advocates-dialogue-overcome-mercosur-crisis_430850; http://www.eluniversal.com/noticias/daily-news/brazilian-senates-economic-committee-backs-venezuelas-mercosur-presidency_430786; and more in Spanish: El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/noticias/politica/sin-acuerdo-entre-coordinadores-mercosur-sobre-traspaso-venezuela_430333; Infolatam; http://www.infolatam.com/2016/08/09/crisis-de-mercosur-a-espera-de-cumplimientos-e-incumplimientos-de-venezuela/; El Mundo, http://www.elmundo.com.ve/noticias/economia/internacional/uruguay--venezuela-estara-en-mercosur-mientras-no.aspx#ixzz4GpY6hGq1)

 

Venezuela-Colombia continue discussing reopening binational border. Venezuela’s Foreign Minister Delcy Rodríguez and her Colombian counterpart María Ángela Holguín met in Caracas and announced that the Presidents of both countries may announce a date for reopening of the binational border. Rodríguez explained “We have agreed upon some preliminary actions that can help create the atmosphere for a gradual and progressive reopening of the border”. She said that Colombia has suggested creating a border ID document so that citizens on both sides can transit through the border between 5 AM and 8 PM, which was accepted by Venezuela. Táchira state governor, Lieutenant José Vielma Mora added that Venezuela has proposed a “special customs system” for the border to deal with a basic group of products. The Defense Ministers from both nations are scheduled to meet over the next couple of months. More in Spanish: (El Nacional, http://www.el-nacional.com/economia/Cancilleres-Colombia-Venezuela-proponen-frontera_0_896910602.html; Noticiero Venevisión: http://www.noticierovenevision.net/politica/2016/agosto/4/164938=cancilleres-de-venezuela-y-colombia-se-reunieron-para-analizar-la-reapertura-de-la-frontera;; El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/noticias/economia/venezuela-propone-regimen-especial-aduanas-frontera-con-colombia_430882)

 

30,000 tons of sugar from Guatemala arrived at Puerto Cabello, according to local Port authority chief General Rafael Aguana. More in Spanish: (El Nacional, http://www.el-nacional.com/economia/Arribaron-toneladas-guatemalteca-Puerto-Cabello_0_898110303.html)

 

1.632 tons of tuna arrive into Cumaná’s port, according to Fisheries and Aquaculture Minister. More in Spanish: (Notitarde, http://www.notitarde.com/Llegaron-1632-toneladas-de-atun-a-Cumana/Economia/2016/08/08/1014882/)

 

Logistics & Transport

CONVIASA cuts daily flights from 20 to 16 due to a pilot shortage after over 80% reportedly have resigned. Sources within the airline report that there are only 6 pilot and co-pilot crews left. More in Spanish: (El Nacional, http://www.el-nacional.com/economia/Conviasa-reducido-vuelos-diarios_0_898710195.html)

 

AVIOR Airlines adds third direct route to Panama, operating from Maracaibo in Western Venezuela. More in Spanish: (El Mundo, http://www.elmundo.com.ve/noticias/economia/empresas/avior-airlines-abrio-tercera-ruta-directa-a-panama.aspx#ixzz4GS3IIVVA)

 

Oil & Energy

Venezuela oil price falls back to April lows. The price Venezuela receives for its mix of medium and heavy oil fell for a sixth consecutive week as world oil stocks remained high and U.S. oil and gasoline stocks continued be in surplus. 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 August 5 was US$ 33.36, down US$ 1.64 from the previous week's US$ 35.00. 

According to Venezuelan government figures, the average price in 2016 for Venezuela's mix of heavy and medium crude is now US$ 32.09 for the year to date. (Latin American Herald Tribune, http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=2418266&CategoryId=10717)

 

OPEC plans informal talks next month, sees oil dip temporary. The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries will hold informal talks at a conference in Algiers next month and considers the recent decline in oil prices temporary, the group’s president said. “Expectation of higher crude oil demand in the third and fourth quarters of 2016, coupled with decrease in availability, is leading the analysts to conclude that the current bear market is only temporary” and prices will increase later this year, Mohammed Al Sada, Qatar’s energy minister and holder of OPEC’s rotating presidency, said in a statement on the group’s website. Members constantly discuss ways to stabilize the market, he said. West Texas Intermediate crude rose to the highest level in almost two weeks, gaining as much as 2.8% to US$ 42.97 a barrel as of 10:26 a.m. on the New York Mercantile Exchange. OPEC ministers, who rejected a proposal to adopt a new output ceiling when they last met in June, had always planned to continue discussions at the International Energy Forum Ministerial Meeting in Algeria next month, two delegates from the group said Friday.  OPEC Secretary-General Mohammad Barkindo met with Venezuela’s Oil Minister Eulogio del Pino about holding a meeting with non-member countries, but Russia sees no need for renewing discussion of an oil-output freeze at current crude prices, while leaving open the possibility for the future, Iran will probably raise production to pre-sanctions levels by the end of the year, while Saudi Arabia will also be selling more crude as domestic use of fuel during the country’s summer months slows. (Bloomberg: http://washpost.bloomberg.com/Story?docId=1376-OBKZ146JTSES01-7PC3UU145ETJ1SELR8MJ57V5JA; Reuters: http://www.reuters.com/article/venezuela-oil-idUSL1N1AL1QT)

 

Venezuela's crude sales to the United States up 25% in July. Venezuelan crude sales to the United States increased to 817,806 barrels per day (bdp) in July, the highest level since November, due to larger exports of grades produced in the vast Orinoco Belt. This country’s July shipments to the United States were 25% higher than in June and 12% more than in the same month in 2015. Falling output and delays at Venezuela's main oil port had kept exports low in recent months. The United States received 50 crude cargoes from state-run oil firm PDVSA and its joint ventures in July, versus 39 the previous month. Valero Energy was the largest recipient, followed by PDVSA refining unit CITGO Petroleum, PHILLIPS 66 and CHEVRON Corp. Occasional buyers of Venezuelan oil including LUKOIL Panamericas and MARATHON Petroleum also received shipments in July, according to the data, which is based on preliminary figures. (Reuters, http://www.reuters.com/article/venezuela-usa-exports-idUSL1N1AL275)

 

China’s Development Bank grants US$ 5 billion to Venezuela, earmarked for joint ventures, says Oil Minister and PDVSA President Eulogio del Pino. He adds that Venezuela is sending China 600,000 BPD of crude oil and the plan calls for the amount increasing to 1 million BPD over the next few days. More in Spanish: (Noticiero Venevisión: http://www.noticierovenevision.net/economia/2016/agosto/8/165269=venezuela-recibira-5-mil-millones-de-dolares-mediante-credito-acordado-con-banco-de-desarrollo-chino)

 

PDVSA’s Del Pino backtracks on statements about errors, private sector participation. A few days ago Venezuela’s Vice President for Energy Affairs and PDVSA President Eulogio Del Pino, an engineer graduated at Stanford University, said publicly that “we must move toward a new model with a private sector majority, and this means admitting mistakes”. The response from regime hardliners was immediate. Former PDVSA President, Rafael Ramírez, currently Venezuela’s UN Ambassador tweeted “Commander Chavez’s oil policy is correct. Nationalization brought oil back to the people. It is his legacy”. Then Lieutenant Diosdado Cabello, Vice President of the ruling PSUV party said “they will not privatize PDVSA because the revolution will rule there until oil runs out”. And former Vice President Elías Jaua wrote: “Has he forgotten there is a Plan for the Fatherland that was approved in popular voting and is now the law of the land?”. Days later, Del Pino backtracked at a rally where he was flanked by Cabello and Jaua: “They have taken some statements in a squalid media, and have set it up trying to indicate that we are trying to privatize the (oil) industry. How can they go to such extremes?”, he said. Analysts wonder why didn’t President Maduro ask for Del Pino’s resignation along with that of Trade and Industry Minister Miguel Pérez Abad? The answer seems to be that PDVSA is preparing a bond swap and financing outstanding debts with suppliers, all of who trust only Del Pino, who may be replaced after such transactions take place. (Analítica: http://www.analitica.com/economia/de-como-el-estatus-quo-puso-de-rodillas-al-presidente-de-pdvsa-por-blanca-vera-azaf/)

 

This could be the last straw for Venezuela's oil sector. Oilfield union officials in Venezuela’s Lake Maracaibo region leaked news to Platts that all is not well in the drilling sector here. With sources saying that major international operator SCHLUMBERGER has halted the majority of its operations.  Union leaders said that SCHLUMBERGER has shut down four of six rigs it was operating for offshore oil production in Lake Maracaibo. The reason being — a lack of payment for drilling services from PDVSA. This shutdown looks to be somewhat of a “last straw” for PDVSA’s operations. After funding for drilling here appeared to come under stress earlier this year — when both SCHLUMBERGER and HALLIBURTON said they were reducing rigs in Venezuela due to non-payment. At the same time, fellow drillers SAN ANTONIO and PETREX suspended a total of 36 rigs across Venezuela. But PDVSA had appeared to be making headway — with SCHLUMBERGER saying in June it had reached an agreement with the oil major to keep six rigs operational in the Lake Maracaibo area.  The fact that most of those drills have now been idled suggests that PDVSA’s last-ditch contract efforts have failed. Possibly signaling a significant cliff ahead for drilling across Venezuela — which could foreshadow an accelerated decline in production. Such a downturn would have big implications for a) global oil supply, b) Latin American oil trade (including the U.S. Gulf Coast), and c) Venezuela projects, national finances, and politics. Watch to see if PDVSA can find a way to get the idled rigs restarted — and for news on further drilling shutdowns in the country. (Business Insider: http://www.businessinsider.com/this-could-be-the-last-straw-for-venezuelas-oil-sector-2016-7)

 

Commodities

Gold Reserve shares surge on US$ 770 million Venezuelan settlement. Gold Reserve Inc. will get about US$ 770 million as part of a settlement with Venezuela for the 2008 seizure of its Brisas gold and copper project in an arrangement that depends on the country securing financing. Shares surged. Payment is expected to be made in two installments: US$ 600 million by the end of October and the rest by year-end, the Spokane, Washington-based company said. Venezuela also agreed to buy the company’s mining data for US$ 240 million and enter into a jointly owned company with Gold Reserve for a 18,000-hectare claim including the Brisas Cristinas deposit. The statement didn’t say where Venezuela, whose oil-dependent economy has been pummeled by slumping energy prices, would obtain the funding. “Venezuela will use the proceeds from any financing it closes after the execution of this agreement to pay Gold Reserve the amounts owed under this agreement in preference to any other creditor,” Gold Reserve said. (Bloomberg, http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-08-08/gold-reserve-shares-surge-on-770-million-venezuelan-settlement)

 

TOYOTA is restarting operations, will produce 150 vehicles per month. TOYOTA has restarted operations at their plant in Cumaná (Sucre state), and expect to produce 150 vehicles per month, for a total 750 assembled units by the end of this year. Their record production was 33,240 units ten years ago. More in Spanish: (El Nacional, http://www.el-nacional.com/economia/Toyota-reanudo-produccion-ofrecera-vehiculos_0_896910604.html)

 

Telefonica opens rate talks in Venezuela after Maduro’s threat. Telefonica SA is holding talks with the Venezuelan government to adjust phone-service rates after President Nicolas Maduro blocked an attempt to increase prices and said the state was open to taking over carriers if necessary. The company is in “talks with the authorities to define new prices," according to a statement on its Venezuelan website Friday. The Madrid-based company also plans to reimburse customers who already paid bills after a July price increase, which was later overturned by the government. As Venezuela struggles with the world’s fastest inflation, Telefonica and rivals had raised prices to stay afloat and be able to pay interconnection fees for international data and call traffic. Nobody can “set prices just like that," Maduro said Aug. 1 on national television, and warned that he was open to taking control of phone carriers if they can’t manage their businesses amid the country’s worst economic recession in decades. (Bloomberg, http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-08-08/telefonica-opens-rate-talks-in-venezuela-after-maduro-s-threat)

 

Economy & Finance

Maduro looks to a Marxist Spaniard for an economic miracle. President Nicolás Maduro, hoping for an economic miracle to salvage his country, has placed his trust in an obscure Marxist professor from Spain who holds so much sway the president calls him “the Jesus Christ of economics.” Alfredo Serrano—a 40-year-old economist whose long hair and beard have also elicited the president’s comparison to Jesus—has become the central economic adviser to Maduro, according to a number of officials in the ruling United Socialist Party and other government consultants. His rise has come at the expense of advisers who, though also leftist, have urged the president to undertake more conventional steps to address Venezuela’s dysfunctional economy, such as liberalizing the country’s tightly controlled currency, these people say. Instead, Serrano’s calls for even more state controls on manufacturing and food supply have largely shaped the president’s response to the country’s economic crisis. Such moves risk prolonging the deepest recession in the nation’s history—as well as the hyperinflation and severe food shortages that have accompanied it. “All the attempts to reform, to coordinate with the private sector, have been blocked by him,” a senior ruling-party lawmaker said. Serrano arrived in Latin America in the mid-2000s with a group of anti-capitalist Spanish intellectuals who would later go on to form Spain’s leftist PODEMOS party. Among his more unorthodox ideas are that inflation is caused by class struggle and that government bureaucracy should be replaced by revolutionary communes that would handle everything from health care to food production. “The communes must be at the center of gravity of the new state,” Serrano said in a July speech in Caracas. (The Wall Street Journal: http://www.wsj.com/articles/venezuelas-nicolas-maduro-looks-to-a-marxist-spaniard-for-an-economic-miracle-1470678805)

 

Venezuela: Trench cabinet. The latest cabinet changes announced by President Maduro are a negative signal, as they reduce the presence of moderate factions within the government while Maduro surrounds himself of loyalists and radicals in what has the appearance of a preamble to radicalization. With the exit of Vice President of Economics Miguel Perez Abad from the cabinet, Eulogio Del Pino, President of PDVSA, is left practically alone in an uncomfortable position on the pragmatic side of the government. In terms of economic policies, the more immediate implication is drifting further away from exchange rate market unification. A possible widening of economic distortions and radicalization of the government also make a successful PDVSA debt swap more difficult. In the current situation, a debt swap of short-maturity bonds that PDVSA has said it is considering would be mainly encouraged by political reasons. PDVSA had not done this swap before because of its high cost, and these conditions have not improved. The government could be changing its mind and be willing to have a transaction, even if it is at the expense of a significant increase in the debt stock and/or the debt service, as long as it increases its margins to maneuver the political situation. A successful debt swap could have a bigger political than economic effect. While cash flows would likely remain tight, it could significantly reduce the probability of a political transition: US$ 6 billion less in debt payments over the next 16 months could be used by the government to increase imports almost 30%, helping it to calm the political situation. Although PDVSA is supposed to be able to issue debt without approval of the National Assembly, the conditions in which this transaction could take place are likely to generate political noise and could give any new administration arguments to question the legitimacy of this debt. A successful swap could have mixed implications for Venezuelan/ PDVSA debt. While it would support the view of the investor base that has maintained a strong confidence in the short-term willingness and capacity to pay of the country, it could weaken the arguments of those who have been expecting a political transition to lead to a more market-friendly government. Perhaps unintentionally, with a successful swap, the market could end up helping the government to prevent the scenario that would be better for the market itself. (Barclay’s: Full Report Attached).

 

July inflation pegged at 23.2% according to sources within Venezuela’s Central Bank; and year to date inflation is now 240%. Inflation for the past full year was 565.2%, only in products under price controls. Central Bank experts say these levels of inflation are unprecedented in Venezuela. More in Spanish: (El Nacional, http://www.el-nacional.com/economia/Inflacion-julio-cerro_0_896910608.html)

 

Lorenzo Mendoza willing to meet with Venezuelan government. Lorenzo Mendoza, the head of Venezuela’s major food producer Empresas Polar, says he is willing to meet with President Nicolas Maduro. “Should President Maduro call me to meet, I will go, just the way I did the other times when I was called,” Mendoza said in an interview. About dialogue, the businessman termed it necessary, but he discouraged dividing dialogue into political or economic. “In today’s civilization and world, communication and dialogue are a coexistence rule. I think sectorizing things (…) removes a natural structure from dialogue. Let’s talk about the relevant topics,” Mendoza added. (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/noticias/daily-news/lorenzo-mendoza-willing-meet-with-venezuelan-govt_430793)

 

Politics and International Affairs

Presidential recall unlikely this year amid new tentative timeline. President Nicolas Maduro is highly unlikely to face recall this year, as authorities provided a detailed electoral calendar suggesting a vote might not happen until early 2017.  If the recall were to happen before Jan. 10, 2017, it would trigger new elections. However, If Maduro were to lose a recall vote after that date, his hand-picked vice president would finish out his term through 2019. The opposition has been accusing the electoral body of dragging its feet on the process to protect the unpopular Maduro. And opposition leaders are planning a massive Sept. 1 march on Caracas to demand the vote. National Electoral Council President Tibisay Lucena said the opposition was “wasting its time.” “This electoral power does not accept pressure from anyone,” she told an audience of administration officials. According to her timeline, the opposition might be asked to collect 3.9 million signatures — or 20% of voter rolls — at the end of October. The body would then have 28 or 29 days to review those signatures and call a referendum. But the CNE can schedule that vote anytime during the next 90 days, making a January or February vote a possibility. (The Miami Herald: http://www.miamiherald.com/news/nation-world/world/americas/venezuela/article94596437.html; Summarium:


 

Independent CNE member refutes Lucena’s presentation. Luis Emilio Rondon, the sole independent member of the 5 member National Elections Council (CNE) says he did not attend Tibisay Lucena’s press conference today because he disagrees with the decision to delay the 20% signature collection to late October. He said an earlier date could be set if technical and logistic preparations begin during the second half of August. He condemned his colleagues for delaying timetables for executing the recall process, which was established in September 2007, and charges that the 5 days needed to check signatures in the first stage were turned into over 30 days. Rondón adds that “there is no legal, technical or logistic obstacle to carry out recall request procedures once requirements are complied with” and says the absence of a timetable since the time the request was accepted “has damaged the principle of impartiality that the institution must maintain” He says the national crisis should lead the CNE to respect the timetables that were established, and must comply with the requisite of “speed in complying with its constitutional duty.” (Prodavinci: http://prodavinci.com/2016/08/09/actualidad/esta-fue-la-respuesta-del-rector-luis-emilio-rondon-al-anuncio-de-tibisay-lucena-sobre-el-revocatorio/)

 

Opposition coalition calls for massive demonstration on September 1st to demand recall timetable. Opposition leader Henrique Capriles Radonski, a former presidential candidate and current governor of Miranda states, if there the National Elections Council (CNE) does not provide a timetable for a recall process against President Nicolas Maduro, the Democratic Unity opposition coalition call for a massive nationwide mobilization to occupy the entire city of Caracas. In reference to today’s statements by CNE Chair Tibisay Lucena, Capriles said “the nation does not accept (the word) “could”(Lucena referred to all possible recall dates in tentative terms) … “it is our constitutional right and we will make it stick” He called Lucena’s press conference was “an exercise in cynicism and lies”, and said Lucena “believes we Venezuelans are fools”. He added that Lucena’s statements aimed at demoralizing voters. (Noticiero Venevision: http://www.noticierovenevision.net/politica/2016/agosto/6/165093=mud-convoca-gran-movilizacion-el-1°-de-septiembre-si-el-cne-no-da-fecha-del-20)

 

National Assembly moves to replace National Elections Council board members. Congressman Julio Borges, who heads the opposition majority in the National Assembly, has announced that the Legislature will appoint members of the Nominating Committee that will elect new members of the National Elections Council as is required this very same year - when their terms expire. He said they would also call upon the CNE to honor the rights of Venezuelans to a recall referendum and regional elections. “This is a right that cannot be negotiated, changed, or manipulated by the government as it tries to remain in power.” More in Spanish: (Ultimas Noticias: http://www.ultimasnoticias.com.ve/noticias/politica/borges-anuncia-creacion-del-comite-elegir-nuevos-rectores-del-cne/; Analítica: http://www.analitica.com/actualidad/actualidad-nacional/julio-borges-vamos-a-constituir-los-comites-de-postulaciones-para-sustituir-al-cne/)

 

Gubernatorial elections remain on hold. The last regional elections to elect state governors and state legislators were held in Venezuela on December 16 2012. The result was a victory for the ruling United Socialist Party (PSUV), which won the governorships of 20 of the 23 states. The term of incumbent governors expires in December of this year. According to Constitution, governors are elected for four-year terms. The National Electoral Council (CNE) has yet to release a decision or a date for these elections, (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/noticias/daily-news/would-be-candidates-for-governors-await-decision-from-the-mud-and-the-gpp_430433)

 

Slow motion coup in Venezuela? In recent weeks Nicolás Maduro appears to have taken a back seat to Venezuela’s top general, defense minister Vladimir Padrino López, who also – unusually – holds the post of operational commander of the armed forces. The prominence of the military in determining Venezuela’s political future was illustrated once again last week by the appointment of Néstor Reverol as interior minister. Unlike Padrino, who rose through the army, Reverol hails from the National Guard. His alleged criminal connections suggest that different factions in the military may now be jostling for shares of influence in the state. The gradual expansion of military powers in response to the regime´s loss of legitimacy is starting to resemble a slow-motion coup. What is in doubt is the army’s ability to improve the situation. General Padrino has said that he does not want to “militarize” the administration but to “restore order” in the face of a “lack of governance” – a strange choice of words, given that any such lack must be attributed to his commander-in-chief. With so much power concentrated in the hands of the military, understanding what their goals are is paramount. Rather than merely shoring up an increasingly unpopular president, the aim of the generals may be to control the transition in a way that protects their own interests. The defense minister’s new role means “the dialogue [over] transition will be with the military”, as one defense expert put it. But if the army cannot halt the slide into economic and social chaos, the crisis could take the generals with it too. So far, there is no sign of a workable plan in that regard. (The Crisis Group: https://www.crisisgroup.org/latin-america-caribbean/andes/venezuela/slow-motion-coup-venezuela)

 

Venturing Into Caracas' Chavismo bastion.

Traditionally, colectivos are known to be radical, left-wing armed groups that support Venezuela's ruling party in exchange for patronage. But they are also individual clans, each seeking to serve as a counterbalance to the others as they vie for resources, territory and power.  According to one source: "There are more than 60 colectivos, some of them have their own personal objectives, like education, where others are inherently linked with government officials, and others, yet the smallest and newest self-label themselves as colectivos, just to inspire fear, but in reality they are criminal bands." Colectivos gained what power they have by aligning with Chavez and still have reason to serve the government to keep its patronage flowing. But they are angry and are frustrated with Maduro's economic policies. Even if his administration sticks to Chavez's model of supporting the groups with money and government aid, there is no guarantee that it will be enough to stop them from protesting his measures. Should the president's plummeting popularity give the Venezuelan opposition room to unseat the ruling party, the next government could seek to rein in the colectivos by reducing their power and autonomy. Such an outcome would provoke heavy resistance, whether through violence or protests. (Stratfor: https://www.stratfor.com/analysis/venturing-caracas-chavismo-bastion).

 

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.