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 Venamcham. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Venamcham. Show all posts

Friday, March 4, 2016

March 04, 2016


International Trade

 

Value of Venezuela-U.S. trade plunges 42%

The value of trade between oil-rich Venezuela and the U.S. totaled US$23.88 billion in 2015, a 42.2% reduction from 2014, says the Venezuelan American Chamber of Commerce and Industry (VenAmCham). Venezuela’s trade surplus with the U.S. fell 62% last year to $7.25 billion, mainly due to the plunge in prices for Venezuelan crude oil.
Oil accounts for the vast bulk of Venezuelan exports to the United States. Imports of U.S. goods and services into Venezuela were US$ 8.32 billion last year, 25.32% less than in 2014, VenAmCham said. (Latin American Herald Tribune, http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=2406828&CategoryId=10717)

 
 

Oil & Energy

 

Venezuela says PDVSA revenue down 27% in 2015

Venezuelan state oil company PDVSA'S total revenues fell 27% to US$ 88.5 billion in 2015, while its total financial debt dropped 4% to US$ 43.9 billion, according to government documents published this week by congress.  The Oil Ministry's annual report also said the OPEC nation's export revenue fell 40%, or US$ 38.5 billion, last year due to the plunge in global oil prices. PDVSA's profit in 2015 was US$ 8.5 billion, down from US$ 11.1 billion the previous year, according to the report, whose figures were unaudited. (Reuters: http://af.reuters.com/article/commoditiesNews/idAFL2N16B01I)

 

Venezuela cut oil shipments to PETROCARIBE 17% in 2015, exports rose to China, India, US

Venezuela sent 17% less oil and fuel to the 18 member nations of PETROCARIBE in 2015, for an average 84,000 barrels per day, according to Oil and Mining Ministry data. It dispatched an average 101,000 barrels per day in 2014. In both years the established quota was to be 129,000 barrels per day. The nation overall increased hydrocarbon exports 3.9%, most of which went to Asia, mainly China and India – which received 1,085 barrels daily for a 13.9% increase. North America received a 3.46% increase in shipments. More in Spanish: (El Universal: http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/160303/venezuela-redujo-en-17-los-envios-de-combustibles-a-petrocaribe-en-201)

 

Venezuela claims upcoming oil meet will discuss production freeze, possible further actions

Oil Minister Eulogio Del Pino says over 15 countries will attend an upcoming oil meeting to discuss an output freeze plan and possible further actions, state oil company, He says Qatar, Russia, and Saudi Arabia have agreed to a meeting in mid-March as part of efforts to stabilize oil markets. (Reuters, http://www.reuters.com/article/us-opec-venezuela-idUSKCN0W4263)

 
 

Commodities

 

State-run Café Madrid stops operations for lack of raw materials

Lack of raw materials has brought coffee production of state-run coffee manufacturer Café Madrid to a standstill, says company union representative Benito Molina. Molina stressed that the company has the capacity to produce 2 million kilos of coffee, yet now they produce not even one kilo. "We are asking the government to revise prices, to see if they are in keeping with (money invested by) producers" Molina said as he added some 1,400 workers are about to become unemployed. (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/160302/cafe-madrid-stops-operations-for-lack-of-raw-materials)

 

Rice growers report dramatic levels in Venezuela

Mary Trini Solórzano, CEO of Venezuelan Rice Mills Association, says that "amid the current rice shortage in the country, rice manufacturers in the association (65% of white rice supply) report critical stock levels of this raw material." She adds that al (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/160302/rice-growers-report-dramatic-levels-in-venezuela)

 

Oatmeal, ketchup and preserve production paralyzed 

Damiano del Vescovo, President of FEDECÁMARAS Carabobo, reports that industrial state’s industries are working at 40% capacity, He says food processing plants there have paralyzed some product lines. Workers and union leaders confirmed his statement, pointing out that QUAKER oatmeal and gelatin plants have been paralyzed since 14 December 2015, The same situation arises with the HEINZ preserves plant at San Joaquín, and with their ketchup in small envelopes and by the gallon. More in Spanish: (El Nacional: http://www.el-nacional.com/economia/Paralizada-produccion-avena-tomate-compotas_0_804519789.html)

 

Shortage of hemophilia medicines at 50% in Venezuela

Head of the Venezuelan Hemophilia National Center Arlette Ruiz de Sáez said the country's medical institutions are facing serious flaws in distribution and delivery of medicines for hemophilia patients, since almost half of these drugs are not available.  The scourge has delayed prompt medical assistance in the regular and long-term administration of drugs to prevent hemophilic arthropathy and bleeding caused by this disease. (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/160302/shortage-of-hemophilia-medicines-at-50-in-venezuela)

 
 

Economy & Finance

 

National Assembly threatens to block foreign financing

National Assembly President Henry Ramos Allup has warned that credit operations the regime is negotiating abroad will be null if they are not authorized by the legislature. He wrote in his Twitter account: “Warning to foreign creditors: contracts in the national interest signed by the chavista government will be absolutely null and void without approval by the National Assembly”. For his part, Deputy José Guerra, who chairs the Assembly’s Finance Committee, wrote: “I second what was said by @hramosallup: credits planned by Merentes (Central Bank President) and Del Pino (Oil Minister and PDVSA President) will be null if not approved by the National Assembly. You are warned.” This could put on hold loan operations for US$ 5 billion recently announced by the Central Bank. More in Spanish: (http://bancaynegocios.com/crisis-institucional-an-amenaza-con-bloquear-financiamiento-externo/; http://www.talcualdigital.com/Nota/123706/ramos-allup-prestamos-al-gobierno-sin-aval-de-la-asamblea-son-nulos-de-toda-nulidad)

 

Venezuela paid US$ 1.54 Billion in principal and interest on debt
Venezuela has paid US$ 1.54 billion in principal and interest owed to international bondholders, the Banking and Finance Ministry said Saturday. That same ministry said this week that Venezuela’s foreign debt rose to US$ 42.53 billion last year; around US$ 3 billion shy of its record-high debt level registered in 2012. (Latin American Herald Tribune, http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=2406626&CategoryId=10718)

 

International reserves are vanishing, credit increasingly expensive

The optimum level for Venezuela’s international reserves is at least US$ 29 billion in order to sustain the volume of imports for six months, they are now down to US$ 13.501 billion, which is less than half of that amount. After paying last week’s debt, there are only US$ 900 left at the Central Bank, which could rise to US$ 1.4 billion as ROSNEFT pays for 23% stock in the PETROMONAGAS project. The Central Bank has been using gold reserves to underwrite expenses, but the value of gold reserves (estimated at US$ 10.9 billion) has shrunk 30% since November due to dropping gold prices. Drawing rights with the IMF have also been reduced by official withdrawals. And further credits, loans, barters or negotiations are becoming increasingly expensive for Venezuela. More in Spanish: (Tal Cual, http://www.talcualdigital.com/Nota/123714/desaparecen-las-reservas-internacionales?platform=hootsuite)

 

S&P says Venezuela has "heightened risk of default"

Standard & Poor's Ratings Services has affirmed its 'CCC' long-term foreign and local currency sovereign credit ratings on the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela. The outlook on both long-term ratings remains negative. They also affirmed their 'C' short-term foreign and local currency ratings. In addition, they affirmed their 'CCC' transfer and convertibility assessment on the sovereign. (Latin American Herald Tribune, http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=2406806&CategoryId=10717)

 

World Bank body partially lifts suspension on Tidewater award in Venezuela case

A World Bank tribunal partially lifted a stay of enforcement on a compensation claim payable by Venezuela to oil service company Tidewater, meaning the company is due US$ 27.4 million plus interest. (Reuters, http://www.reuters.com/article/venezuela-tidewater-idUSL2N1692CH)

 

Venezuela’s financial struggles must be top U.S. priority

As low oil prices shake the global economy, keeping an eye on Venezuela should be a top priority for the U.S., Robert Kahn, a senior fellow for international economics at the Council on Foreign Relations, told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on Wednesday. “Of all the countries that are at risk, this is the one we need to be most focused on right now,” Kahn said. “Because Venezuela is a country on the edge.” “If the government responds by further compressing imports, popular support for the government could collapse,” Kahn said in his written testimony. “Change could come quickly, not because of a debt payment due but rather because of domestic conditions.” He added that if Venezuela’s financial struggles lead to a change in government, the U.S. and international policymakers should move quickly to help set up a plan to: move Venezuela’s national energy prices to world levels; balance the country’s budget; recapitalize its banks; and develop a social safety net. (Morning Consult: https://morningconsult.com/alert/economist-u-s-must-focus-on-venezuelas-financial-struggles/)

 

Venezuela is running out of money

The price of oil, which makes up almost all of the country’s exports, has tumbled 75% in the past three years and investors are predicting the country is on course for the biggest-ever emerging-market sovereign default. No nation in the world is more likely to miss payments, according to traders of its credit-default swaps. The country already tops measures of the world’s most miserable economy, a horrific turnaround for what was once one of the region’s most stable democracies. If there’s a default, when is it most likely to come? In October and November of this year, PDVSA needs to pay back US$ 4.1 billion of bonds and US$ 1 billion in interest. Trading in the credit-default swaps market suggests there’s a 76% chance Venezuela will default in the next 12 months. What overseas assets could investors try to seize? PDVSA has refineries, tankers and receivables. Of course, the value of the oil assets depends in part on the price of crude. The operating assets of CITGO, PDVSA’s U.S. refining subsidiary, are already pledged to creditors. Is there any hope that things can get better? First, the government could implement reforms such as cutting subsidies on gasoline or devaluing the currency, which would allow it to stretch its dollar income much further. Second, the political opposition is gaining ground. Third, China could appear with new financing. Fourth, oil prices could rise. The country can scrape by with an average price this year of US$ 50 to US$ 65 a barrel, according to estimates from Barclays, Bank of America and Nomura. (Bloomberg: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-02-10/venezuela-s-descent-into-world-s-riskiest-sovereign-credit-q-a)

 

National Assembly moves to take back powers over Central Bank

A new law just passed in its first discussion by the opposition majority within Venezuela’s National Assembly aims at reversing Maduro’s last minute decree of December 2015.  MUD’s bill basically claws back two areas of influence for the Assembly: 1) it allows the Assembly to name 2 (out of 7) board members; and 2) it allows AN to demand information from the BCV.  In the words of the President of the Subcommittee for Finance and Tax Policies, Rafael Guzman, the reform aims to restore AN’s role as BCV’s watchdog. (Caracas Chronicles: http://caracaschronicles.com/2016/02/29/51805/)

 

China and Venezuela ratify investment projects

Venezuelan and Chinese governments on Monday ratified investment agreements in production projects signed in September 2015, for diversifying the nation’s economy. The announcement was made by Planning Minister Ricardo Menéndez. Menéndez, who heads the China-Venezuela High Level Joint Commission, is in Beijing, briefing Chinese officials. (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/160302/china-and-venezuela-ratify-investment-projects)

 


Politics and International Affairs

 

Opposition to go for constitutional assembly if Court continues hampering Assembly

Jesus Torrealba, executive secretary of the opposition Democratic Unity Roundtable (MUD) says Torrealba said a National Constitutional Assembly would be called “if the government continues perverting the functions of the Supreme Justice Tribunal and other institutions”.  The opposition is continuing meetings to settle upon a political plan to end Maduro’s term of office, “because the least costly way of making changes is the constitutional way…two other instruments are being debated: a constitutional amendment and a recall referendum”. The Supreme Court is meanwhile likely to reject any constitutional maneuvers to oust the president -- which could also include convening a constitutional assembly to draft a new charter or declaring Maduro in breach of duty. Highlighting the tension gripping the country, violence broke out Wednesday at a protest over the recent Supreme Court ruling in the western city of San Cristobal, the cradle of the protests that shook the country in 2014. Chavistas, in turn, attacked and wounded an opposition legislator right outside the National Assembly. (Jamaica Observer: http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/latestnews/Venezuelan-opposition-delays-announcing-plan-to-oust-Maduro; and more in Spanish: (Ecos del Torbes: http://ecosdeltorbes.net/2016/03/04/mud-apostaria-por-asamblea-constituyente-si-tsj-emprende-nuevas-acciones-contra-an/)

 

Confrontation continues between National Assembly and Supreme Court

  • The National Assembly ad hoc committee analyzing the appointment of 34 justices (13 main justices and 21 alternates) to Supreme Court (TSJ) last December by the government’s simple majority found 17 irregularities in their appointment. Among them, that the Nomination Committee was not presided by a legislator after PSUV Deputy Elvis Amoroso resigned.
  • The Supreme Court countered with a sentence written by magistrate Arcadio Rosales, stripping the National Assembly of powers to revoke appointments of Supreme Court justices, oversee other state powers, summon government and military officials, and said the two thirds majority within the legislature was 112, after having suspended 3 out of 112 opposition legislators.
  • National Assembly President Henry Ramos Allup immediately responded saying the sentence “does not exist. The Supreme Court law requires the sentence to be signed by 5 out of 7 magistrates in the Constitutional Chamber, and it was signed by only 4”.
  • Ramos Allup further warned pro government legislators that To depend only, only on Supreme Court sentences means something is very wrong with the government. The regime is very weak, with no popular support, and depends only on Supreme Court sentences; beware of depending on that Court which appears discredited in all polls; if this all collapses – as it is on the verge of doing – we all know what could happen”.
  • He also sent a message to the international financial community: “Warning to foreign creditors: contracts in the national interest signed by the chavista government will be absolutely null and void without approval by the National Assembly
  • The National Assembly then voted to ask the OAS to apply Democratic Charter in Venezuela as the constitutional order has been violated here, deplored the TSJ ruling and ratified the Congress as an authority to control and investigate all matters set forth in Article 187 of the Constitution, paragraph 1.
(El Universal: http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/160303/congress-asks-oas-to-apply-democratic-charter-in-venezuela; http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/160302/an-we-will-legislate-regardless-of-court-decisions; Veneconomy, http://www.veneconomy.com/site/index.asp?ids=44&idt=47007&idc=1; http://www.veneconomy.com/site/index.asp?ids=44&idt=47008&idc=1); and more in Spanish: (Konzapata: http://konzapata.com/2016/03/el-alerta-de-ramos-allup-que-silencio-a-la-bancada-oficialista/?ct=t()

 

OAS SG: Main symptom of political failure is lack of talks

Secretary General of the Organization of American States (OAS) Luis Almagro says political and social stability in Venezuela is fundamental for the regional body. In this regard, Almagro reiterated that the OAS seeks peace and democracy for the country. He stressed that negotiations must be conducted "with much institutional and democratic respect" adding that "the first symptom of political failure is lack of dialogue". (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/160301/oas-sg-main-symptom-of-political-failure-is-lack-of-talks)

 

Obama extends order declaring Venezuela a national security threat

President Barack Obama on Thursday extended for one year an executive order declaring the situation in Venezuela a threat to U.S. national security, saying conditions there had not improved and that the country's leftist-led government was continuing to erode human rights guarantees. The U.S. head of state also said Venezuela was continuing to experience abuses in response to protests against President Nicolas Maduro, arbitrary arrests of anti-government protestors and significant public corruption by senior government officials. The executive order also authorizes the Treasury Department to impose additional sanctions on those found to have committed either "actions or policies that undermine democratic processes or institutions" or rights violations against persons involved in anti-government protests, the White House said. (Fox News Latino: http://latino.foxnews.com/latino/politics/2016/03/03/obama-extends-order-declaring-venezuela-national-security-threat/)

 

SPECIAL REPORT: In Venezuela, armed groups find opportunity in calamity

As economic and political instability rises, the streets of Caracas will likely see more violence. So far, the government has not proved capable of pacifying and retaking the colectivo-controlled neighborhoods, which are essentially separate political entities. Despite being highly disorganized, the colectivos have managed to take advantage of the ruling party's fragmentation and its weakened grip on power, bringing anarchy to the streets of Caracas. Some 80% of Venezuela's colectivos are concentrated in western Caracas, primarily in the neighborhoods of Sucre, Petare, Cotiza, Chacao and Catia. For the most part, Venezuelan security forces are not allowed into neighborhoods controlled by colectivos without first receiving permission, even if they have search and arrest warrants. The government has lost its sovereignty in such areas, making it difficult to enforce the rule of law there. This has given the colectivos room to pursue illegal activities largely unhindered, including drug trafficking, extortion, racketeering, contract killings and car theft. The colectivos' interests align with those of the PSUV, their longtime backers, particularly when it comes to tamping down on Venezuela's political opposition. For example, the colectivos used aggressive tactics, including attacks against political rallies for Venezuelan opposition leaders, in the lead-up to the country's December 2015 legislative elections. They now harass opposition lawmakers being sworn into the National Assembly in January. Nevertheless, a rift is forming between the colectivos and the government of President Nicolas Maduro, who launched Operation Liberation and Protection of the People in mid-2015. The effort, which primarily aimed to disarm the paramilitary colectivos and combat organized crime more generally, sparked an unofficial war between the colectivos and the government. The feud resulted in the deaths of 350 public officials in 2015; in January, government forces reciprocated by killing more than 200 alleged members of organized crime. In the meantime, the colectivos have antagonized Maduro even more by killing off-duty security personnel and kidnapping a high-ranking military officer. As the Venezuelan economy continues to fall apart, the colectivos will likely seize the opportunity to launch contraband operations, stealing trucks carrying food and basic products with the intent of reselling the stolen goods at much higher prices. And the Maduro government, already embroiled in a lengthy political spat with the opposition, will likely be too preoccupied to stop them. Given enough time, the colectivos could even evolve into organized crime groups — a threat that would prove even more difficult to eradicate. (Stratfor: https://www.stratfor.com/analysis/venezuela-armed-groups-find-opportunity-calamity?id=be1ddd5371&uuid=b8197835-f1e2-4ca1-9020-b045182a3e1d)

 

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, October 8, 2015

October 08, 2015


International Trade

 

US-Venezuela trade is down 38.6% YTD in August 2015

A report by the Venezuelan-American Chamber of Commerce (VENAMCHAM), based on US Census Bureau figures shows that through August 31st, total trade was US$ 17.273 billion, a 38.6% drop from the same time frame last year. Net total trade was US$ 4.947 billion, a 66.21% drop. More in Spanish: (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/151007/intercambio-comercial-entre-eeuu-y-venezuela-se-ubico-17273-millones; El Nacional; http://www.el-nacional.com/)

 

 

Logistics & Transport

 

CONVIASA suspended its flights to Madrid and Buenos Aires

Without prior notice or any official statement, the Venezuelan air carrier notified passengers via telephone it had suspended flights to these two destinations due to “operational reasons.” Twelve thousand ticket holders have been affected. (Veneconomy, http://www.veneconomy.com/site/index.asp?ids=44&idt=45738&idc=3)

 

 

Oil & Energy

 

Venezuelan crude exports to the United States fell 10%  in September

Venezuelan crude exports to the United States declined 10% in September versus the previous month due to lower sales of heavy and medium grades to some of regular customers, according to Reuters trade flows data and PDVSA trade documents. State-run oil company PDVSA and its joint ventures sent 44 crude cargoes to the United States last month carrying 724,230 barrels per day (bpd), compared with 807,065 bpd in August. Sales of diluted crude oil (DCO) made with naphtha rose again to 348,200 bpd, from 311,130 bpd in August, but the increase was not enough to offset an export decline to regular clients including PDVSA's refining unit CITGO Petroleum, MOTIVA Enterprises, PHILLIPS 66 and PBF Energy's Chalmette refinery. Venezuela also delivered in September a 200,000-barrel cargo of natural gasoline and a 240,000-barrel cargo of jet fuel to PETROCHINA with the United States as destination, according to PDVSA's internal imports and exports reports. The country imported four 500,000-barrel cargoes of heavy naphtha last month from trading firms VITOL and TRAFIGURA and PDVSA also bought some 3.8 million barrels of Cabinda, Kissanje, Nemba and Bonny Light crudes received at its Bullenbay storage terminal in Curacao. (Reuters: http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/10/07/us-oil-venezuela-usa-idUSKCN0S12JM20151007)

 

2016 budget projects oil prices at US$ 35-40 per barrel

Sources close to the Finance Ministry report that the government has the 2016 Budget and Debt Law ready, with few surprises. It calls for a "conservative" budget and are estimated oil prices in the US$ 35-40 per barrel range, which was the projection for 2015. The drop in world oil prices will force the government to lower their estimations. More in Spanish: (El Mundo, http://www.elmundo.com.ve/noticias/economia/politicas-publicas/petroleo-entre--35-y--40-es-la-premisa-presupuesta.aspx#ixzz3nyEsn5QL).

 

Venezuela’s power energy crisis worsens as the direct result of the implementation process of an authoritarian, statist, central-oriented, offhand and arbitrary political project, according to Antonio Patiño, a member of the Engineers’ Guild’s National Power Committee. In a study conducted by 100 electrical engineers in this committee for eight years, they explain the current situation the National Power System faces and its outlook. (Veneconomy, http://www.veneconomy.com/site/index.asp?ids=44&idt=45740&idc=3)

 

 

Economy & Finance

 

Venezuela's economy worst in world as IMF Forecasts 10% contraction

Venezuela will see its economy shrink more than any other country in the world this year as lower oil prices drain government coffers, according to the International Monetary Fund. “Venezuela is projected to experience a deep recession in 2015 and 2016,” the IMF said Tuesday in its World Economic Outlook. The country’s real gross domestic product probably will contract 10% this year and 6% in 2016, it said. President Nicolas Maduro’s policy response to the economic crisis remains paralyzed ahead of congressional elections set for Dec. 6. The bolivar has slumped to 792 to the dollar on the black market, while the official rate remains at 6.3. The government has also maintained fixed prices for staple foods, even as supplies run out in many shops and prices for other goods soar. Inflation in Venezuela, already the fastest in the world, will average 159% in 2015 and increase to 204% next year, the IMF said. The price Venezuela receives for its oil exports, which accounts for about 95% of foreign currency earnings, has fallen 52% in the past year. Barclays characterized Venezuela’s economic troubles as the “deepest economic crisis in its history” in a Sept. 25 note to clients. “It is impossible to understand why the government is not reacting to this reality, why it has not taken measures to alleviate the economic distortions that are destroying the real income of Venezuelans,” Barclays said. (Bloomberg, http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-10-06/venezuela-worst-in-world-as-imf-forecasts-economy-to-shrink-10-)

 

BARCLAY's: Will Venezuela score an own goal?

Barclays reports that its own estimates support a statement by Finance Minister Rodolfo Marco Torres that the Venezuelan government owns 20-25% of its own bonds. It adds that the Venezuelan government’s high exposure to its own debt implies that the public sector would be a big loser in a default scenario. This, it says, combined with a still non-negligible position in hard currency assets, reinforces their view of a strong willingness to pay among the country’s authorities. The report adds that the public sector debt portfolio is highly concentrated in five PDVSA bonds that, in total, should account for around 70% of the portfolio: PDVSA 26, 24, 22N, 15, and 17N. The largest holders of this debt are Banco de Venezuela, BCV and the PDVSA pension fund.  Barclays concludes that although the government has indicated hard currency assets of US$ 46 billion, they estimate the disposable assets total around US$ 15.1 billion, and believe this should allow the government to meet debt payments until at least Q116, though at the expense of depleting its liquidity position. (BARCLAYS: Full report attached).

 

Venezuela’s liquid international reserves were US$ 1.7 billion as of September 30, down 9.62% from September 16, according to Inter American Trends. (Veneconomy, http://www.veneconomy.com/site/index.asp?ids=44&idt=45742&idc=2)

 

Bonds buyback prevents Venezuela's possible default

Ramiro Molina, the Director of the Center of Finance and Economy Studies (CEFE), said foreign debt maturities of the Venezuelan government and state-run oil company Petróleos de Venezuela (Pdvsa) in 2016 amount to nearly US$ 9.93 billion, including payment of principal and interests. Venezuela "has the capacity to honor foreign debt," said Molina, despite persistent concerns in international markets about a possible default by Venezuela. He added that the country "is in a more comfortable position upon bonds buyback" mainly by PDVSA. Molina said  those operations make a default less likely. (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/151007/bonds-buyback-prevents-venezuelas-possible-default)

 

PepsiCo’s Q3 earnings per share fall 73% on Venezuela charges

Food and beverage giant PepsiCo said that its earnings per share fell 73% in the third quarter due to charges of US$ 1.4 billion, or US$ 0.92 per share, related to a change in the way it accounts for its operations in Venezuela. (Latin American Herald Tribune, http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=2397728&CategoryId=10717)

 

 

Politics and International Affairs

 

President Maduro rejects US ambassador's remarks on the Essequibo

President Nicolás Maduro has rejected statements made by US Ambassador to Guyana, Perry Holloway, regarding the territorial conflict between Guyana and Venezuela. Maduro also alerted that his Guyanese counterpart, David Granger, sought to create a "major" conflict with Venezuela by disregarding the Geneva Agreement, which was endorsed by both countries as a mechanism to try to find a peaceful solution to the border dispute. "All the governments of Guyana have acknowledged the Geneva Agreement, except for Granger's government," Maduro noted. (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/151007/president-maduro-rejects-us-ambassadors-remarks-on-the-essequibo)

 

...and National Assembly Speaker Cabello: Guyana's government is "out of its mind; it wants war"

National Assembly Speaker Lieutenant Diosdado Cabello called Perry's statements "very serious"; and said the government of President David Granger is "out of its mind," because, in his view, Guyana "wants a war" with Venezuela over the Essequibo. "We are not going to war; we will not do that. We want peace," Cabello stressed. (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/151006/congress-speaker-cabello-guyanas-govt-is-out-of-its-mind-it-wants-war)

 

Venezuela arrests 250 in crackdown on Colombian border
Venezuelan authorities say that 250 people have been arrested along the western border of Tachira state – including Venezuelan police officers, soldiers and 34 suspected Colombian paramilitaries – since President Nicolas Maduro ordered the closure of the border with Colombia on Aug. 19. Tachira Governor Lieutenant Jose Vielma Mora and the military commander on the border, General Efrain Alvarado, announced the tally during a nationally broadcast joint press conference in the state capital. (Latin American Herald Tribune, http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=2397730&CategoryId=10718)

 

Opposition coalition rejects agreement to abide by results

Jesús Torrealba, Executive Secretary of the Democratic Unity Conference (MUD) said the regime has failed to abide by recent results, and it is not possible to trust an agreement proposed by President Nicolás Maduro calling for respecting the results of December 6th parliamentary elections. He pointed to several instances where "the government has shown disrespect for election results", not only against opposition officials, but also against former chavistas "who defect". More in Spanish: (El Nacional; http://www.el-nacional.com/)

 

Lucena says the National Elections Council does not count polls, it counts votes

Tibisay Lucena, Chair of the National Elections Council rejected "negative matrixes" against the institution she heads, and  spoke of "real reality versus fabricated reality". She said it is not possible to speak of "fraud" and cast doubt on the Council's "transparency", which she believes seeks to disqualify the institution. Lucena added that there were no changes to election constituencies. "There are the same ones as in the 2010 parliamentary elections. Not one was created." She also denied the Council is discouraging opposition voters: "Had there been a 'hidden' elections registry, there would not have been 2.2 million voter moves, through changes in address and new registrations", she argued. More in Spanish: (El Nacional; http://www.el-nacional.com/)

 

Spain asks "all parties" to accept election results in Venezuela

The Spanish Minister of Foreign Affairs and Cooperation, José Manuel García-Margallo, has said he expects the December 6 parliament vote in Venezuela to be held "in normal conditions" and that "all parties accept the electoral result." "The minister added that he knew he would be lambasted for his statements. (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/151006/spain-asks-all-parties-to-accept-election-results-in-venezuela)

 

MERCOSUR refuses to invoke "democratic clause" on Venezuela over López' imprisonment

Brazil's Florivaldo Fier, MERCOSUR's High Representative, says "the democratic clause is applied when there is a coup against a constitutional government", and is applied through consensus, "not at the request of one of its members".  Fier was responding to a statement by Argentine presidential candidate Mauricio Macri, who said that if elected he would ask MERCOSUR to demand freedom for jailed Venezuelan opposition leader Leopoldo López. Macri said "we are doing to demand freedom for Leopoldo López, and if Maduro does not accept we are going to call a meeting with MERCOSUR nations and ask that the democratic clause be applied." (Infolatam: http://www.infolatam.com/2015/10/08/mercosur-descarta-clausula-democratica-a-venezuela-por-lopez/)

 

Socialists’ grip on power in Venezuela may be too strong to dislodge

Amid food shortages, galloping crime and inflation that could top 150% this year, polls show swelling support for the country’s political opposition which could win a majority in the Dec. 6 legislative elections. Should that happen it would be a first major breakthrough for the opposition, which has lost nearly every local and national election since the late Hugo Chavez ushered in Venezuela’s socialist revolution in 1999. It would break the power monopoly of the ruling Socialist Party, which controls the judiciary, the legislature and government watchdog agencies — all of which answer to President Nicolas Maduro. And it would open the door for a recall referendum to remove Maduro from power. The problems started under Chavez, who died of cancer in 2013, but have accelerated under Maduro, who lacks the charisma of his predecessor. “No Socialist Party candidates want Maduro to visit their states because that would be the kiss of death,” says Jesus Torrealba, spokesman for the opposition coalition known as the Democratic Unity Roundtable. Under these conditions, an opposition victory in December might seem like a certainty. It’s not. State workers are now being pressured to vote for ruling party candidates who also count on government financing and a propaganda boost via the many TV and radio stations controlled by the government. Some opposition leaders have been sidelined by judicial fiat. Pollster Luis Vicente Leon said that over 16 years in power, first Chavez and now Maduro have mastered the electoral arts. “They fiercely control the institutions and the money which allow them to become stronger through electoral engineering even when their support is flagging,” Leon wrote. Even so opposition candidates are expected to win a majority of the 164 seats. Yet their power would be limited. Political analyst Carlos Romero says that before new deputies take the oath of office in January, the outgoing Maduro-controlled National Assembly could renew the extraordinary powers that have allowed the president to rule by decree since March. New laws that challenge government authority could be thrown out by judges loyal to Maduro. Victory on Dec. 6, Romero says, “is important for the opposition in political terms but it’s not going to change the course of the country.” (TIME: http://time.com/4061641/socialists-venezuela-maduro/)

 

 
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, August 11, 2015

August 11, 2015


International Trade

 

Venezuela's trade with the US is down 36.61%

Total Venezuela-US trade during the first half of this year was US$ 12.952 billion, a 36.61% drop from last year's first semester, which stood at US$ 20.433 billion, according to a report prepared by the Venezuelan American Chamber of Commerce and Industry (VENAMCHAM), based on US Census Bureau data. Oil exports were 47.57% less, mainly due to the drop in oil prices. More in Spanish: (El Mundo, http://www.elmundo.com.ve/noticias/economia/internacional/venamcham--intercambio-comercial-con-eeuu-cayo-36-.aspx#ixzz3iV9C6Hj6)

 

A rocky path for exports

In 1998 the export of non-oil products brought in 29% of the country's revenues. Today it makes up barely 3% of the country's total revenues, according to figures from the National Institute of Statistics (INE). Procedural hurdles, permits, falling production, foreign exchange controls and economic decrees, not to mention inefficiency, are among the many stumbling blocks to bridging the gap between a packaged product placed in a container and the buyer abroad who would be a potential source of foreign currency earnings. Ramón Goyo, head of the Venezuelan Exporters Association (AVEX) says Venezuela has lagged in this area and that the downward trend in non-oil exports will continue in the coming years if controls and monitoring that further compound the difficulties of exporting remain in place. (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/150808/a-rocky-path-to-exports)

 

 

Oil & Energy

 

Venezuela oil price tumbles even further

Venezuela's weekly oil basket price fell to within US$ 5 of its 2015 lows as oil prices slipped in international markets on economic worries about China, a nuclear deal that would allow Iran to sell more oil, in addition to the U.S. market remaining amply supplied. According to figures released by the Ministry of Energy and Petroleum, the average price of Venezuelan crude sold by Petroleos de Venezuela S.A. (PDVSA) during the week ending August 7 was US$ 43.15, down US$ 2.72 from the previous week's US$ 45.87. (Latin American Herald Tribune, http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=2394108&CategoryId=10717; Veneconomy, http://www.veneconomy.com/site/index.asp?ids=44&idt=44997&idc=4)

 

Over 30% of PDVSA’s workers are staging protests in different areas of the state oil company, said Zulia’s oil workers’ representative José Boada. Workers at the San Francisco, Maracaibo and Costa Oriental del Lago docks have begun a series of protests that have resulted in partial stoppage in seven docks. (Veneconomy, http://www.veneconomy.com/site/index.asp?ids=44&idt=44998&idc=4)

 

Improvised engineers for PDVSA

The Venezuelan regime is “training” workers to receive degrees as bachelors and superior technicians in careers that will allow them to manage PDVSA and other government key companies, much as it did with the so-called community doctors. Courses offered, professors and students in this university do not comply with the requirements set by the traditional university system. (Veneconomy, http://www.veneconomy.com/site/index.asp?ids=44&idt=44988&idc=4)

 

 

Commodities

 

Looters target Venezuelan food stores as shortages spark frustration

Venezuelan supermarkets are increasingly being targeted by looters as lines and prolonged food shortages spark frustration in the nation struggling with an economic crisis. Shoppers routinely spend hours in lines to buy consumer staples ranging from corn flour to laundry soap, turning lines into venues for shoving matches and frequent attempts to plunder shops. 56 lootings and 76 looting attempts took place in the first half of 2015, according to the Venezuelan Observatory of Social Conflict, which based the figures on media reports and testimony of observers around the country. More frequent than these serious events are minor melees that ensue when delivery trucks arrive at stores carrying prized products such as chicken or milk. Lines are increasingly filled with smugglers who buy subsidized goods and resell them at a profit on the black market or in neighboring Colombia, generating tension between resellers and those trying to stock their own kitchens. Local food producers ranging from neighborhood bakeries to an industrial pasta maker have halted or slowed operations for lack of raw materials or machine parts. Obtaining low-cost food and medicine, once the hallmark of the Hugo Chávez era, has become a daily struggle. (The Guardian, http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/aug/07/looters-target-venezuelan-food-stores-as-shortages-spark-frustration)

 

COLGATE PALMOLIVE stopped producing powdered soap

Workers at the COLGATE PALMOLIVE detergent plant in Valencia have been notified by the company that powdered soap production has ceased indefinitely due to lack of packaging material. The flier indicates the company has been losing on detergent production for months because official prices do not cover production costs. (El Nacional; http://www.el-nacional.com/)

 

Poultry farms shutting down for lack of feed

Rafael Moreno, President of the Táchira State Poultry Association, reports more farms there are closing down due to lack of feed, baby chicks and medicines. (El Nacional; http://www.el-nacional.com/)

 

 

Economy & Finance

 

Venezuela ‘terrorized by oil price drop’

Amid lower oil prices, Venezuela is struggling to maintain the social spending that characterized the Chávez era. Crude accounts for 96% of export revenues: a halving in the oil price over the past 14 months means revenues have slumped by about US$ 36 billion compared with the average of the previous two years, when the government raked in almost US$ 79 billion. The fall in oil prices has inflicted massive pain on exporting countries, widening budget deficits and weakening currencies around the world. Energy companies have been forced to lay-off thousands of workers and scrapped multibillion-dollar projects. But Venezuela is facing the greatest economic threat of any of the world’s major producers. With shortages of basic goods — from milk to nappies — becoming more acute each day as imports shrink, it is not only populist housing projects that are likely to be shelved, warn observers.  Venezuela is running on fumes,” says Russ Dallen, who heads investment bank, LATINVEST. “The current oil income is insufficient to allow the country to pay its debts, fund its imports and service its foreign bonds.” The debt — issued by the government and a handful of state-run companies including the oil group PDVSA — adds up to a total of US$ 128 billion to be paid back over the next 24 years. But US$ 6.3 billion of that falls due before the end of the year, according to Bank of America. So far Caracas has been able to keep paying its foreign bond creditors by selling assets, securitizing oil debts and raiding its foreign reserves, burning through more than US$ 7billion since late February. They now stand at US$ 16.9 billion, one of their lowest levels in the past decade, according to central bank data amid fears that the coffers could run empty in the first quarter of 2016, triggering a possible balance of payments crisis and knock-on implications for heavily exposed bondholders. The economy is forecast to shrink by 7% this year. This is not solely due to a fall in the oil price. The mismanagement of the industry — the failure to invest — and a series of unsuccessful nationalizations are key to understanding Venezuela’s plight. (The Financial Times, http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/c9c4b05c-0b81-11e5-994d-00144feabdc0.html#axzz3iM8zNJnr)

 

JP Morgan says that Venezuela's economic crisis will be worse than expected

The firm had estimated GDP contraction for 2015 at 5.5%, but since the crisis has been worse than expected and no steps have been taken to meet it, it has changed its estimation to a 8% GDP contraction. It also expects inflation to hit 200% by the end of the year and the forcecast continues worsening. JP Morgan says "the lack of official reports has made us revise our prognosis for 2015, which reflects greater deterioration than we previously expected". More in Spanish: (El Nacional; http://www.el-nacional.com/)

 

TPCG Group reports that drawing funding from the PETROCARIBE system appears exhausted

The international consulting firm says most of the debt under this agreement is currently in the hands of countries with few possibilities to take advantage of recent refinancing, such as the ones done by the Dominican Republic and Jamaica. It claims only greater cuts of crude oil shipments will allow putting a limit to the cost continuing with the agreement costs Venezuela. (Veneconomy, http://www.veneconomy.com/site/index.asp?ids=44&idt=45006&idc=4)

 

High cash withdrawals restricted at banks

Zulia state’s regional daily PANORAMA reports that individuals have been told at different banks they can withdraw up to Bs.20,000-Bs.40,000 due to shortages of high-denomination bills, money fleeing through the border and problems with paper money to print bills. The situation has been echoed in other states as well. (Veneconomy, http://www.veneconomy.com/site/index.asp?ids=44&idt=45005&idc=2)

 

"Simplification" will not mean lifting FOREX controls

Pro-government legislator Alexander Dudamel, a member of the Finance Committee at the National Assembly, says foreign exchange simplification will not mean lifting foreign exchange control. His reference is to a proposal by former Chavez minister of finance Rodrigo Cabezas. Dudamel says: "The government will not let foreign exchange control slip from its grasp, because even with that measure in force, speculation is ravaging the economy," he commented. He stressed that the government needed to maintain foreign exchange control along with appeals for dialogue with productive sectors, plus improvements in foreign exchange disbursements, to build more trust. (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/150808/simplification-does-not-mean-lifting-forex-control)

 

FEDECAMARAS open to talks with Maduro

Francisco Martínez, President of the Venezuelan Federation of Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FEDECÁMARAS) has said the institution expects dialogue with the President  after a meeting held last week with the Vice-president of the Congress, Deputy Elvis Amoroso. Martínez says that both private and public companies have long expected to hold unbiased and sincere talks to address the root causes of the country's problems. He also asked the vice-president of the Parliament to publish economic indicators collected by the Central Bank of Venezuela, so all productive sectors can be aware of real inflation rates here. (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/150810/commerce-chamber-expects-unbiased-talks-with-the-executive-office; Veneconomy, http://www.veneconomy.com/site/index.asp?ids=44&idt=44996&idc=2; http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/150810/national-assembly-commerce-chamber-talks-move-forward)

 

 

Politics and International Affairs

 

Maduro and Granger invited to meet at the UN

Guyanese Foreign Minister Carl Greenidge has confirmed that UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon is seeking to set up a meeting between his country's President David Granger and Venezuela's Nicolás Maduro, to discuss the Essequibo border dispute during the upcoming UN General Assembly in September. More in Spanish: (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/150811/invitan-a-maduro-y-granger-a-reunirse-en-la-onu)

 

Venezuela's first transgender candidate to run for Congress

The first transgender politician to run for popular election in Venezuela has registered as candidate for Congress as part of the opposition bloc, promising to advance gay rights in the traditionally macho society. Lawyer and gay rights activist Tamara Adrian had to register under her given name Thomas Adrian despite a 2002 sex change, because Venezuelan law does not allow anyone born male to legally become female or take a woman's name. "We're going to fight so that everyone gets respect," said Adrian, amid a tussle of candidates and cheering supporters at the gates of an elections authority office in Caracas. Adrian is running with the opposition party Voluntad Popular, which includes some of the most outspoken critics of President Nicolas Maduro. Two gay candidates are also running with Voluntad Popular. (Reuters, http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/08/07/venezuela-politics-idUSL1N10I1BJ20150807)

 

Prominent American lawyer John Pate murdered in his apartment in Venezuela

Prominent lawyer John Pate, a US citizen, was stabbed to death by assailants in his apartment in Caracas on Sunday evening. Pate, 71, was a member of the Editorial Board of the Caracas Daily Journal, the predecessor of the Latin American Herald Tribune. He received his J.D. law degree from Boston University in 1969; and an M.A. and an M.A.L.D. from The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University in 1971 and 1972, respectively. He was Vice Chair of the Latin American and Caribbean Law Committee in the International and Business Law Sections of the American Bar Association. Pate came to Venezuela as a professor of International Business and Latin American Integration at the Institute for Higher Administration Studies (IESA, 1974-1977); and later was a founding member of De Sola Pate & Brown. He served in numerous institutions, was a Director of the Entrepreneurial Center for Conciliation and Arbitration – CEDCA, Director of the Centro Venezolano Americano – CVA, and a member of the Legal Affairs Committee of VENAMCHAM. His first wife, Gertie Paez Pate, a well-known Peruvian painter and descendant of Venezuela's first President José Antonio Páez, died of cancer in 2007. According to police, the criminals reportedly entered his apartment with the intent to rob him, but instead killed him with multiple stab wounds. His companion, Sally Evan Oquendo, 67, was wounded and is hospitalized. (Latin American Herald Tribune, http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=2394180&CategoryId=10717)

 

 

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.