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.

Friday, September 12, 2014

September 12, 2014

International Trade

Venezuela extends night closure of Colombia border to stop smuggling
Venezuela says it will extend an overnight closure of its border with neighboring Colombia for another three months in a campaign to stop widespread fuel and food smuggling. The measures to stop traffic crossing between 10 p.m. and 5 a.m., and limit the movement of cargo vehicles during the day, were introduced in mid-August to combat the lucrative business in smuggling heavily subsidized Venezuelan products. "We are going to pursue and punish smugglers with double severity," President Nicolas Maduro said, announcing the three-month extension. "They are looting the republic." (Reuters, http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/09/12/us-venezuela-colombia-idUSKBN0H62ND20140912)

MELIÁ planning five hotels in Venezuela
MELIÁ Hotel International will be managing five new hotels in Venezuela under the Innside By Melia brand in the coming years, the company announced. The hotels will be developed together with investor Franco Biocchi Zurita. “This framework agreement is a major landmark in the consolidation of the Innside brand as a market leader for urban hotels in cities with strong growth and development potential in Latin America, while also strengthening our strategic alliance with Franco Biocchi to develop extraordinary and successful hotel projects in Venezuela,” said Gabriel Escarrer, CEO of MELIÁ Hotels International. Melia said the first hotel would be the Innside Punto Fijo Hotel in the state of Falcon, which is slated to open in 2016. (Caribbean Journal, http://www.caribjournal.com/2014/09/11/melia-planning-five-hotels-in-venezuela/)


Oil & Energy

PDVSA seeks bids for CITGO in potential US$ 10 billion deal
Venezuela's state-run oil company PDVSA is seeking preliminary offers for its U.S. unit CITGO Petroleum Corp by the end of September a deal that could fetch up to US$ 10 billion, according to two people familiar with the matter. Venezuela is selling CITGO in part due to a cash crunch stemming from repaying debts to Beijing with oil, rather than selling the crude to generate revenue, analysts say. The government denies a cash-flow problem exists. Within President Nicolas Maduro's government, the potential sale is controversial and seen as a privatization that would contradict years of socialist policies, including a nationalization of the oil industry in 2006 and 2007. Investment bank Lazard Ltd, which is running the sale process for CITGO on behalf of PDVSA, has sent offering materials to potential buyers, the people said in recent days, asking not to be named because the matter is not public. PDVSA also has a 50% stake in the Chalmette refinery in Louisiana alongside Exxon Mobil Corp, which owns the remainder. The Venezuelan oil company has tapped Deutsche Bank separately to explore a sale of its stake in that refinery. A sale, if it were to come to fruition, would be Venezuela's biggest pullback ever from the U.S. refining market. (Reuters, http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/09/09/us-refineries-citgo-pete-sale-idUSKBN0H428720140909)


Commodities

Steel: Venezuela’s showcase city becomes symbol of economic meltdown
Long before Hugo Chávez launched his socialist revolution, government planners came to Ciudad Guayana on Venezuela’s eastern frontier, where the Orinoco and Caroni rivers converge, and envisioned an industrial workers’ paradise. A half-century later and 15 years after Chávez came to power, Ciudad Guayana’s factories are crippled, starved for investment and riled by labor disputes. The workers’ standoff with President Nicolás Maduro – Chávez’s successor and a former union leader himself – has turned Ciudad Guayana into a crucial battleground for the socialist government as it faces economic meltdown and political infighting. When it was founded, Ciudad Guayana and its state-run heavy industries were Venezuela’s best hope for breaking the country’s overwhelming dependence on crude oil exports. It had the raw materials on hand: iron ore, bauxite and gold; timber and farmland; and huge rivers to supply cheap hydropower for smelters and factories.  The steelmaking company at the core of the Ciudad Guayana project, SIDOR, produced a record 4.3m tons before it was nationalized by Chávez in 2008. Today, most of its furnaces sit cold, deprived of raw materials, new technology and reliable labor. The last contract for its 14,000 steelworkers expired four years ago. National Assembly president Diosdado Cabello – Venezuela’s second-most-powerful figure after Maduro – has denounced union adversaries at SIDOR as “mafias” in the service of US “imperialism”, offending many of the workers who consider themselves Chávez loyalists and true patriots. In private, government officials say SIDOR will need to produce 250,000 ton of steel a month just to break even. Its current output is closer to 70,000 tons. Closing the gap will require hundreds of millions in new investments. One official close to the SIDOR negotiations who was not authorized to speak publicly said it makes little sense for Venezuela to sink more money into inefficient steelmaking. “We could let SIDOR die and import all the steel we need,” he said. “And there would still be enough to pay the workers’ salaries.” (The Guardian, http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/sep/09/venezuela-maduro-labour-dispute-ciudad-guayana)

Detergent plant is paralyzed for lack of supplies
A powdered detergent plant owned by Alimentos POLAR has been paralyzed for the past 15 days for lack of supplies. Some 400 workers at the plant were on protest to ask the government to release a sodium sulfate load that has been held up at Puerto Cabello since August 22nd. More in Spanish: (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/140910/planta-de-detergentes-de-polar-esta-parada-por-falta-de-insumos)

Toyota’s plant in Cumaná remains closed by workers one week after they began a conflict with the assembler’s board of directors, due to differences over salary raises and the elimination of quota assignments to workers to purchase cars at cost price. (Veneconomy, http://www.veneconomy.com/site/index.asp?ids=44&idt=41019&idc=3)


Economy & Finance

Maduro says Venezuela can pay debt, blasts default fears, orders legal action against economists
President Nicolas Maduro said Venezuela could meet all its obligations to bondholders, as he sought to quell market fears that the Socialist-run country may opt to default when US$ 5 billion of its foreign debt falls due for repayment next month. Fears of a possible default heightened, with bond yields spiking, after the publication of an article by a former planning minister and a pro-opposition economist that suggested an orderly default could ultimately help Venezuela's slumping economy. "We're prepared to meet our international obligations in their entirety," Maduro declared on Wednesday night. "Down to the last dollar." He said Harvard economist Ricardo Hausmann - who recently wrote the government should prioritize its debt to the Venezuelan people above international bond holders - is a "bandit" and added: "I have ordered the Solicitor and spoken to the Prosecutor so that we can start action against you..key advisor to all those groups that want to harm Venezuela...and work as financial hit men for those forces at the IMF and oligarchies" (Reuters, http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/09/11/us-venezuela-bonds-idUSKBN0H60DF20140911; Bloomberg, http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-09-11/venezuela-bonds-rally-on-maduro-pledge-to-pay-every-last-dollar.html; and Noticiero Digital: http://www.noticierodigital.com/2014/09/maduro-acuso-al-economista-ricardo-hausmann-de-bandido-y-sicario-financiero/)

Specter of default looms over Venezuela despite oil reserves
Venezuela is struggling to meet its international bond payments, raising the specter of an Argentine-style default despite the country’s massive oil reserves. Yields on Venezuelan bonds, the third-largest constituent of JPMorgan’s global emerging bond index, have risen since Caracas put CITGO, the country’s US refining operation, up for sale and scrambled to reassure investors it can refinance US$ 7 billion coming due this year on its more than US$ 80 billion of sovereign debt. A Venezuelan default could be widely felt. The country accounts for 7% of emerging market benchmarks, meaning a default could force redemptions of other investments by passive index-tracking funds. As Morgan Stanley wrote in a research report late last year: “Venezuela may affect your . . . portfolio, even if you don’t own it.” Until recently, bond investors drew comfort from Venezuela’s US$ 85 billion annual oil exports. But confidence was shaken this week as yields on short-dated bonds issued by PDVSA, the state owned oil company, shot above 25%. Venezuelan credit default swaps also rose to levels comparable to Argentina. “The [Venezuelan] government is clearly exploring any and all options to generate additional cash in order to stay afloat, with an eye on short term fixes,” comments Risa Grais-Targow, Latin America analyst at Eurasia, the risk consultancy. Venezuela’s public finances certainly look tight. Despite US$ 21 billion of reserves, less than US$ 3 billion of these are liquid. The government also has about US$ 9 billion in obscure off-budget funds, plus eventual proceeds from CITGO’s sale. “The difference between Argentina defaulting and Venezuela is that Argentina had nothing to lose,” says Luis Vicente León OF DATANALISIS, a local pollster. “By contrast, Venezuela has substantial foreign assets under risk – from CITGO, to oil shipments, to PDVSA receivables . . . That makes default risk devastating.” On Wednesday, BNP Paribas recommended buying Venezuelan bonds. Other investment banks also said Venezuela had enough funds to meet import needs and short-term debt payments, although to continue doing so it needed to embrace politically costly reforms. “I don’t think Venezuela is going to default, although the probability has greatly increased,” said Russ Dallen of Caracas Capital Markets. “It is a case of the ‘devil you know versus the devil you don’t’. And the problem is we don’t know.” (Financial Times, http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/279da4e8-39b1-11e4-83c4-00144feabdc0.html#axzz3D2HGtX3o) 

Venezuelan bonds recover slightly
Venezuelan bonds value recovered slightly following President Nicolás Maduro's remarks stating that the country is capable of honoring its international debts which slightly exceed US$ 5 billion in bonds maturing next month.
Venezuelan bonds plummeted last week amid investors' concerns about short supply of dollars in the country, which has hit its economic variables and worsened shortages of staples. However, President Maduro said on Wednesday that his administration was prepared to meet its foreign liabilities. "Despite greater risk of non-payment to domestic sectors, namely airlines, automobile, pharmaceutical, and food, (Venezuelan) authorities will continue to honor their financial debt and international obligations," says Diego Moya-Ocampos, analyst at IHS, referring to the multi-million outstanding debt caused by delays in foreign currency supply. (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/140911/venezuelan-bonds-recover-on-thursday)

The Central Bank (BCV) corrected the annualized inflation rate on Wednesday, a day after it had presented the figures, using the new “methodology.” Now, inflation in June was 4.4%, 4.1% in July and 3.9% in August for an annualized rate of 62.2% and not 60.5% as initially reported between June 2013 and June 2014. (Veneconomy, http://www.veneconomy.com/site/index.asp?ids=44&idt=41009&idc=2; El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/140910/central-bank-of-venezuela-revises-down-inflation-figure; http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/140910/capriles-inflation-sets-record-high-even-with-fabricated-numbers; http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/140911/utility-rates-in-venezuela-up-55-in-12-months; Bloomberg, http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-09-09/venezuelan-inflation-slows-for-third-consecutive-month-in-august.html)

Retailers report sales plunged 52% in the second quarter
According to a poll conducted by the National Trade and Services Council (CONSECOMERCIO) up to 52.2% of retailers report sales plummeted in the second quarter, "Rather than improve, the numbers have slipped," says CONSECOMERCIO's president, Mauricio Tancredi. He says high inflation, insecurity, low stocks, and price regulations are the main obstacles facing the commercial sector. (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/140911/retailers-claim-sales-plunged-52-in-the-second-quarter)

Food inflation climbs 210% in 24 months in Venezuela
The government has implemented a price regulation policy for many products, managed a large network of agro-industrial companies, and held thousands of hectares in the agricultural sectors. However, their results are below the expectations. According to figures disclosed by the Central Bank (BCV), the average price of food and non-alcoholic beverages skyrocketed 210% in August 2012 - August 2014. (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/140911/food-inflation-climbs-210-in-24-months-in-venezuela)

DATÁNALISIS: 84% describe the current economic situation as negative
DATANALISIS Director Luis Vicente Leon reports that 84% of all Venezuelans consider the current economic situation is negative and 53% doubt this government is able to solve economic problems. More in Spanish: (El Mundo, http://www.elmundo.com.ve/noticias/economia/politicas-publicas/datanalisis--84--de-la-poblacion-considera-negativ.aspx#ixzz3D0YXsVIQ)


Politics

Maduro claims his regime is set to win 2015 legislative elections
President Nicolás Maduro claims his United Socialist Party (PSUV) is getting ready for "a great victory" in parliamentary elections set for October 2015 to teach those have "sabotaged the economy" a "lesson". He added that "the shakeup is only beginning... we are going after the remainder of the bourgeois state". More in Spanish: (Infolatam)

Opposition leader Leopoldo Lopez on trial September 22
One of Venezuela's main opposition leaders, Leopoldo Lopez, again appeared in court in Caracas and the next hearing has been set for September 22nd. He is accused of inciting violence during anti-government demonstrations earlier this year and has been in custody since 18 February, when he handed himself in to the authorities. He denies all the charges. Dozens of people gathered outside the courthouse to demand his release. The prosecution was expected to present more evidence against him. Lopez, who is the head of the Popular Will Party, has accused the government of President Nicolas Maduro of jailing Venezuelans for seeking democratic change. Other opposition activists detained during the protests earlier this year have also appeared in court in Caracas. The authorities accuse Lopez of inciting violence and encouraging demonstrators to vandalize government buildings. Only two of the four witnesses summoned for this fourth hearing showed up and according to López’ defense they “irrefutably” determined there was no arson at the Attorney General’s Office building last February 12 which is one of the charges against Voluntad Popular leader and the four students, Marco Coello, Christian Holdack, Ángel González and Demian Martin. (BBC, http://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-29151975?utm_source=Sailthru&utm_medium=email&utm_term=%2AMorning%20Brief&utm_campaign=2014_MorningBrief-%20RD%20PROMO%209.11.14; Veneconomy, http://www.veneconomy.com/site/index.asp?ids=44&idt=41011&idc=1; El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/140911/leopoldo-lopezs-next-hearing-scheduled-for-september-22; Latin American Herald Tribune, http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=2351650&CategoryId=10717)

US is concerned over the "lack of due process" for opposition leaders here
US State Department spokesperson Marie Harf referred to opposition leaders imprisoned after protests began in February, including Leopoldo López, and mayors Enzo Scarano and Daniel Ceballos, saying: "The US is deeply concerned by the lack of due process and guarantees in procedures against those detained over protests in Venezuela". More in Spanish: (Diario 2001, http://www.2001.com.ve/en-el-mundo/eeuu-preocupado-por-la--falta-de-debido-proceso--a-opositores-en-venezuela.html)

BLOOMBERG View: Colombia does Venezuela's dirty work
How to parse Colombia's decision to hand over two young Venezuelan fugitive dissidents to the Bolivarian thought police? One theory: To seal a peace deal with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), Juan Manuel Santos, Colombia's president, is again pandering to the autocrat next door. It's no secret that Venezuela has long been in the corner of the Colombian insurgents, who have been waging terror and mayhem against Colombia’s government for the last half-century, often with a wink and a nod from their Venezuelan patrons. That toxic bond had estranged Colombia and Venezuela for most of the previous decade, with the hawkish Alvaro Uribe pitted against the chief Andean tub-thumper, Hugo Chavez. Since Santos was first elected in 2010, he has gone out of his way to end the Andean Cold War, infuriating Uribe, many Colombians, and the entire Venezuelan opposition besides. Exhibit A: his 2011 extradition of suspected Venezuelan drug-trafficker, Walid Makled, then in a Colombian jail. Not to the U.S., where Makled was wanted for a farrago of felonies, from running cocaine to abetting the FARC, but to Venezuela, where his trial has yet to be concluded. Two years on, peace is still elusive, but Santos has kept courting the Chavistas. Gabriel Valles, aged 27, and Lorent Saleh, 26, are members of an organization protesting the government of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, but they aren't exactly hardened criminals, much less game changers in the peace parley. Both had slipped over the border to evade the Venezuelan courts, where they face charges of troublemaking during antigovernment street protests, including "inciting public disorder," spreading "false information," and a Bolivarian gem called "public uncertainty," which is Chavista-speak for anything their men in red want it to be. Since they were first hauled into Venezuelan court, they'd been under orders to report every few weeks to the police and were barred from traveling abroad. So effectively, their offense was skipping probation. Venezuela hadn't even issued an extradition request when Colombia handed the two over to Venezuelan intelligence last week. More tellingly, perhaps, Saleh and Valles were reported to be close to former president Uribe, Santos's archenemy, and had criticized the Santos administration in speeches, adding a note of potential political payback to the surrender. (Bloomberg, http://www.bloombergview.com/articles/2014-09-11/colombia-does-venezuela-s-dirty-work)

Brownfield slams Venezuela's lack of cooperation on narcotics
US Assistant Secretary of State of the Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs William Brownfield says drug traffic through Venezuela has increased considerable due to lack of cooperation with the US and other countries in the Hemisphere. "When I arrived in Venezuela as Ambassador in 2004 we had some sort of cooperation....when I left almost all cooperation had ended. This creates an opportunity for drug traffic and creates the problem we now have". More in Spanish: (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/140910/brownfield-critica-la-no-colaboracion-del-pais-en-drogas)

Venezuela gains support to sit on the UN Security Council
According to Amín Cruz, a Dominican Republic diplomat who chaired a closed door meeting of Latin America and Caribbean representatives at the UN on July 23rd, the decision was taken there to support Venezuela's candidacy to a term on the UN Security Council. The last time Venezuela attempted to gain a seat on the Council - in 2006 - it was torpedoed by the US, which has not spoken on the issue at this time. More in Spanish: (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/140912/venezuela-aseguro-apoyo-regional-al-consejo-de-seguridad)



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, September 9, 2014

September 09, 2014

International Trade

FOREX agency causes delay in imports
In 2013, the government created the Venezuelan Foreign Trade Corporation (CORPOVEX) to conduct imports and supply of goods to the public-private sectors. During 2014, the corporation has been the intermediary for different sectors requiring imports, yet the process has been slow. But business considers CORPOVEX has delayed imports as foreign suppliers have not been paid on time. The official figures show that out of the US$ 4.3 billion approved by the Ancillary Foreign Currency Administration System (SICAD 1) so far this year, only US$ 1.2 billion (28%) has gone through CORPOVEX. (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/140908/venezuelan-forex-agency-causes-delay-in-imports)

Import decline indicates recession
The Central Bank of Venezuela (BCV) has failed to publish the latest GDP figures; but there are growing signs that the country has fallen into recession. In its latest report on Venezuela, Bank of America says the decline in imports in the first semester resembles that recorded in times of severe economic adjustments in Venezuela. The National Statistics Institute (INE) reports imports were US$ 17.3 billion in the first semester this year, a 22% drop compared to the same period in 2013. Francisco Rodríguez, an analyst at Bank of America, explains that if imports keep their downward trend in 2014, they will decline by 35.5% compared to 2012. This would translate into the fourth biggest downturn in imports here since 1946. (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/140908/decline-in-imports-suggests-recession-in-venezuela)


Oil & Energy

Andres Oppenheimer: Obama’s plan to counter Venezuela’s oil clout 
Venezuela’s oil industry is in a free fall and Venezuelan oil-dependent Caribbean countries may soon find themselves in a major crisis, while U.S. energy production is booming, and is seeing an opportunity to come to the rescue of energy-strapped Caribbean Basin countries. Vice President Joe Biden visited Trinidad and Tobago and met with Caribbean leaders to discuss greater energy cooperation. In June, Biden visited the Dominican Republic, and announced that the United States would launch a “Caribbean Energy Security Initiative” to help the region become more self-sufficient in energy. The Sept. 3 U.S.-Grenada energy cooperation provides greater details about the plan. U.S. officials describe it as a “pilot program” to help Caribbean Basin countries change their energy laws and improve their infrastructure to encourage private and international financial institutions to invest in wind, solar, geo-thermal, natural gas and other energy sources. A recent Atlantic Council report entitled “Uncertain Energy: the Caribbean’s gamble with Venezuela” warns that the Obama administration’s evolving plans to help Caribbean Basin countries develop their own renewable energy industries is a good long-term strategy, but won’t help much in the near term. With relatively little money — as little as US$ 30 million per country, according to a recent Inter-American Development Bank study — Washington could help build re-gasification technology and off-loading facilities in the Caribbean. That’s very little money, would help Caribbean Basin countries reduce their dependence from Venezuela, and would do more than a thousand speeches to improve U.S.-Caribbean Basin ties. (The Miami Herald, http://www.miamiherald.com/2014/09/06/4332141/andres-oppenheimer-obamas-plan.html#storylink=cpy)

PDVSA, ANCAP agree to drill oil
Uruguayan state-run oil company ANCAP has signed US$ 50 million oil drilling agreement with Petróleos de Venezuela (PDVSA). The deal will help resume drilling in an area located at 200 kilometers of the Orinoco Oil Belt, in partnership with an unspecified private company. (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/140908/pdvsa-ancap-agree-to-drill-oil)


Commodities

Mitsubishi halts Venezuela plant due to imports snag
Japanese automaker Mitsubishi's subsidiary in Venezuela has halted operations due to a delay in the import of parts for assembly. Mitsubishi's local unit, MMC Automotriz, began a month-long stoppage on Monday, says union official Jahaziel Bolivar. "We're waiting for materials to arrive," he said, adding that they were held up at a port in western Venezuela. (REUTERS, http://www.todayonline.com/business/mitsubishi-halts-venezuela-plant-due-imports-snag-union)

Striking TOYOTA union has paralyzed production
Striking union workers at the TOYOTA production plant say they will continue to keep operations at a standstill until an agreement is reached with the company. More in Spanish: (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/140909/sindicato-de-toyota-mantiene-paralizacion-de-la-produccion; El Mundo, http://www.elmundo.com.ve/noticias/economia/laboral/protesta-laboral-paraliza-actividades-en-la-planta.aspx)

SIDOR workers have resumed their strike in rejection of a collective bargaining agreement signed by some with the government, without the consent of union leadership. Union (Sutiss) Claims Secretary Leonardo Azócar conditioned SIDOR’s operations to resuming the discussion on the labor agreement. (Veneconomy, http://www.veneconomy.com/site/index.asp?ids=44&idt=40960&idc=3; and more in Spanish: (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/140909/sidoristas-exigen-discutir-11-clausulas-socioeconomicas)

State owned companies operating in the red for 5 years
Official reports show state controlled industries in steel, aluminum, cement, food and the automotive industry have been running in the red for up to 5 years due to financial limitations, lack of supplies, transportation and equipment deficiencies, and lack of training - with lowered operational capacity and negative results. More in Spanish: (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/140909/empresas-estatales-acumulan-hasta-cinco-anos-con-perdidas)


Economy & Finance

Venezuela bonds are collapsing
Venezuela bond prices are collapsing as oil prices weaken, investors feel the government has postponed steps to stabilize the economy, and a meager contribution into the newly created Reserve Fund intensifies doubts on the ability to meet high debt service payments due in October. This means the nation must pay high interest rates on international financing at the same time it has cut back on FOREX supply to the private sector at an artificially low rate of VEB 6.30/US$1. The Global 27 dropped 3.5 points to 68.8% and has fallen 8.5 points over the past week; the PDVSA 22 fell 5.5 points and has sharply dropped 10.5 points in the last 6 days, to 82.5% of its value. More in Spanish: (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/140909/se-desploma-precio-de-los-bonos-en-divisas-del-pais; Ultimas Noticias, http://www.ultimasnoticias.com.ve/noticias/actualidad/economia/en-picada-los-bonos-de-deuda-venezolana.aspx)

A default is suggested by Harvard economists
As Venezuela racks up billions of dollars of arrears with importers that are fueling the worst shortages on record, one of the nation’s top economists is questioning the government’s decision to keep servicing its foreign bonds. A “massive default on the country’s import chain” is part of what has allowed the nation to keep paying its foreign bonds, says Ricardo Hausmann, a former Venezuelan planning minister who is now director of the Center for International Development at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts. “I find the moral choice odd. Normally governments declare that they have an inability to pay way before this point.” (Bloomberg, http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-09-07/venezuelan-default-suggested-by-harvard-economist.html) FULL ARTICLE REPRINTED BELOW

Pro government legislator says economic actions have not been ruled out
The president of the Parliament's Finance Committee, Ricardo Sanguino, says the economic steps that former Economy Vice-president Rafael Ramírez had been working on have not been ruled out but postponed. The steps included FOREX conversion, flexibility on price regulations, and a revision of gasoline prices. More economic sectors will be included into the Ancillary Foreign Currency Administration System (SICAD 1), says the lawmaker. (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/140908/venezuelan-legislator-economic-actions-have-not-been-ruled-out)

Extreme poverty doubles in six Venezuelan states
The Venezuelan National Statistics Institute (INE) reveals that the poverty rate in 2013 did not rise only in the Capital District; in the rest of the country, the problem got worse. The poverty rate measured by income shows that rising prices deteriorate Venezuelan quality of life. Inflation at the end of 2012 was 20.2%, and 25.4% of the population could not afford buying the basic food basket. One year later, inflation jumped to 56.2% and poverty reached 32.1% of Venezuelans. Official data also shows increasing extreme poverty. In one year-term, the percentage of people unable to buy the food basket went from 7.1% to 9.8%. (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/140908/extreme-poverty-doubles-in-six-venezuelan-states)


Politics

Should Venezuela default?
Will Venezuela default on its foreign bonds? Markets fear that it might. That is why Venezuelan bonds pay over 11 percentage points more than US Treasuries, which is 12 times more than Mexico, four times more than Nigeria, and double what Bolivia pays. Last May, when Venezuela made a US$ 5 billion private placement of ten-year bonds with a 6% coupon, it effectively had to give a 40% discount, leaving it with barely US$ 3 billion. The extra US$ 2 billion that it will have to pay in ten years is the compensation that investors demand for the likelihood of default, in excess of the already hefty coupon. Venezuela’s government needs to pay US$ 5.2 billion in the first days of October. Will it? Does it have the cash on hand? Will it raise the money by hurriedly selling CITGO, now wholly owned by Venezuela’s state oil company, PDVSA?

A different question is whether Venezuela should pay. Granted, what governments should do and what they will do are not always independent questions, because people often do what they should. But “should” questions involve some kind of moral judgment that is not central to “will” questions, which makes them more complex. One point of view holds that if you can make good on your commitments, then that is what you should do. That is what most parents teach their children. But the moral calculus becomes a bit more intricate when you cannot make good on all of your commitments and have to decide which to honor and which to avoid.

To date, under former President Hugo Chávez and his successor, Nicolás Maduro, Venezuela has opted to service its foreign bonds, many of which are held by well-connected wealthy Venezuelans. Yordano, a popular Venezuelan singer, probably would have a different set of priorities. He was diagnosed with cancer earlier this year and had to launch a social-media campaign to locate the drugs that his treatment required. Severe shortages of life-saving drugs in Venezuela are the result of the government’s default on a US$ 3.5 billion bill for pharmaceutical imports.

A similar situation prevails throughout the rest of the economy. Payment arrears on food imports amount to US$ 2.4 billion, leading to a substantial shortage of staple goods. In the automobile sector, the default exceeds US$ 3 billion, leading to a collapse in transport services as a result of a lack of spare parts. Airline companies are owed US$ 3.7 billion, causing many to suspend activities and overall service to fall by half. In Venezuela, importers must wait six months after goods have cleared customs to buy previously authorized dollars. But the government has opted to default on these obligations, too, leaving importers with a lot of useless local currency.

For a while, credit from foreign suppliers and headquarters made up for the lack of access to foreign currency; but, given mounting arrears and massive devaluations, credit has dried up. The list of defaults goes on and on. Venezuela has defaulted on PDVSA’s suppliers, contractors, and joint-venture partners, causing oil exports to fall by 45% relative to 1997 and production to amount to about half what the 2005 plan had projected for 2012. In addition, Venezuela’s Central Bank has defaulted on its obligation to maintain price stability by nearly quadrupling the money supply in 24 months, which has resulted in a 90% decline in bolivar value on the black market and the world’s highest inflation rate. To add insult to injury, since May the Central Bank has defaulted on its obligation to publish inflation and other statistics. Venezuela functions with four exchange rates, with the difference between the strongest and the weakest being a factor of 13.

Unsurprisingly, currency arbitrage has propelled Venezuela to the top ranks of global corruption indicators. All of this chaos is the consequence of a massive fiscal deficit that is being financed by out-of-control money creation, financial repression, and mounting defaults – despite a budget windfall from $100-a-barrel oil. Instead of fixing the problem, Maduro’s government has decided to complement ineffective exchange and price controls with measures like closing borders to stop smuggling and fingerprinting shoppers to prevent “hoarding.” This constitutes a default on Venezuelans’ most basic freedoms, which Bolivia, Ecuador, and Nicaragua – three ideologically kindred countries that have a single exchange rate and single-digit inflation – have managed to preserve.

So, should Venezuela default on its foreign bonds? If the authorities adopted common-sense policies and sought support from the International Monetary Fund and other multilateral lenders, as most troubled countries tend to do, they would rightly be told to default on the country’s debts. That way, the burden of adjustment would be shared with other creditors, as has occurred in Greece, and the economy would gain time to recover, particularly as investments in the world’s largest oil reserves began to bear fruit. Bondholders would be wise to exchange their current bonds for longer-dated instruments that would benefit from the upturn.

None of this will happen under Maduro’s government, which lacks the capacity, political capital, and will to move in this direction. But the fact that his administration has chosen to default on 30 million Venezuelans, rather than on Wall Street, is not a sign of its moral rectitude. It is a signal of its moral bankruptcy. (Ricardo Hausmann, a former minister of planning of Venezuela and former Chief Economist of the Inter-American Development Bank, is Professor of the Practice of Economic Development at Harvard University, where he is also Director of the Center for International Development; Miguel Angel Santos is a senior research fellow at Harvard’s Center for International Development and Associate Professor at Venezuela's leading business school IESA.)



The following brief is a synthesis of the news as reported by a variety of media sources. As such, the views and opinions expressed do not necessarily reflect those of Duarte Vivas & Asociados and The Selinger Group.

Friday, September 5, 2014

September 05, 2014

International Trade

Metallurgic exports retained at ports
Authorities have retained metallurgic products for export at Venezuelan ports due to a recent ban on exporting iron, steel and aluminum products. They promised to specify the products that cannot be traded, but have not yet divulged the list and are holding back all iron and aluminum byproducts. More in Spanish: (El Nacional; http://www.el-nacional.com/)


Logistics & Transport

ALITALIA restarts Venezuela flights after hiatus due to FOREX dispute
Italian airline ALITALIA has started to fly to Venezuela again after a near two-month halt when carriers trimmed operations following government delays in releasing ticket revenue under the country's strict currency controls. ALITALIA did not provide reasons for suspending or resuming service. The International Air Transport Association (IATA), which represents around 240 global airlines, said in July that while Venezuela had permitted repatriation of US$ 424 million shared among some airlines, US$ 4.1 billion of airline ticket sales remained trapped in the country. (Reuters, http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/09/02/us-venezuela-airlines-alitalia-idUSKBN0GX2EB20140902)


Oil & Energy

PDVSA chances of lifting output seen boosted by reshuffle
The removal of President Nicolas Maduro’s main policy maker improves Venezuela’s chances of tapping more of the world’s largest crude reserves, according to Barclays. While Rafael Ramirez’s exit from the posts of vice president for economy and energy minister dims hopes for economic reform, it may give his successor at Petroleos de Venezuela SA the opportunity to focus more on the job of pumping oil. Besides running PDVSA, Ramirez oversaw the exchange system and housing programs among other non-oil duties. “The appointment of Del Pino to PDVSA is marginally positive,” according to Barclays analysts Alejandro Arreaza, Alejandro Grisanti and Donato Guarino: “This increases the chances of increasing production.” (Bloomberg, http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-09-03/pdvsa-reshuffle-boosts-chances-of-oil-output-increase-barclays.html; El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/140904/new-pdvsa-president-faces-the-challenge-of-lifting-oil-output)


Economy & Finance

Maduro says Venezuela will honor international debt, creates "strategic" unified reserve fund
President Nicolás Maduro says Venezuela "confirms to the world that we will continue to comply, as we have throughout our 15 year revolution, and we have all the procedures ready to honor those international obligations that will come due during the next weeks, we have reviewed and we have the capacity, the strength, and it was thus calculated". He also announced the creation of a single account within Venezuela's Central Bank to unify the nation´s "strategic" reserves - and said it will be opened immediately with US$ 750 million. The unified account will include funds from the National Development Fund (FONDEN), the Chinese Fund and other funds and financing sources in order to strengthen strategic reserves. Analysts believe the move sends a positive signal that the national can face its obligations. HSBC considers this move "should reduce uncertainty over the real amount of disposable assets". (Veneconomy, http://www.veneconomy.com/site/index.asp?ids=44&idt=40920&idc=2; El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/140903/venezuelas-international-reserves-in-a-single-account; and more in Spanish: (Agencia Venezolana de Noticias; http://www.avn.info.ve/contenido/ejecutivo-crear%C3%A1-cuenta-%C3%BAnica-bcv-para-fortalecer-reservas-internacionales; Infolatam; El Mundo, http://www.elmundo.com.ve/noticias/economia/banca/cuenta-unica-en-el-bcv-dara-transparencia-a-los-fo.aspx#ixzz3CLQ4t2Jl)

Analysts expect no changes in FOREX allocations
Tamara Herrera, director of the Síntesis Financiera think tank explains: "I do not believe there are plans to change the FOREX allocation system, it would seem they want to show markets that there are funds available, and if a credible balance is shown risk perception would diminish". Former Central Bank Economic Research Director José Guerra does not believe FONDEN and China Fund money will enter Central Bank reserves in order to boost FOREX allocation for private imports. More in Spanish: (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/140904/analistas-no-esperan-cambio-en-distribucion-de-las-divisas)

Venezuelan bonds tumble as outlook for devaluation dims
Venezuelan bonds tumbled after President Nicolas Maduro removed the main economic policy maker, fueling speculation that a devaluation and cut in fuel subsidies that would bolster reserves will be delayed. The government’s US$ 4 billion of notes due in 2027 sank 0.72 cents to 74.83 cents on the dollar at 12:01 PM in New York, bringing the two days of losses to 3.85 cents, the biggest drop in 10 months. (Bloomberg, http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-09-03/venezuela-s-maduro-removes-ramirez-from-economy-vp-pdvsa.html; El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/140903/venezuelan-bonds-fall-following-cabinet-reshuffle)

Government establishes Economic Offensive Fund to support private sector
President Nicolas Maduro has announced the creation of a US$ 500 million Special Economic Offensive Fund which will be used to boost the productive capacity of the private sector. He said the funds will be deposited in the economic and social development bank BANDES, for immediate investment in diverse projects, ranging from industrial to tourism, "which are part of the main driving forces of the private sector economy that should be supported." Maduro 3 billion bolivars for financial support to national entrepreneurs who decide to join the new economic offensive, to boost production and supply. (AVN, http://www.avn.info.ve/contenido/govt-created-economic-offensive-fund-support-private-sector)


Politics

Cabinet shakeup
President Nicolas Maduro announced a major restructuring of his Cabinet that will see the man who has run state oil giant PDVSA for more than a decade become Venezuela's top diplomat.  The shakeup is meant to lay the basis for "five revolutions" in the realms of economics, knowledge, social programs, state policy and "territorial socialism," Maduro said. Rafael Ramirez, long-time PDVSA chief, minister of Petroleum and Mining and Vice President for Economic Affairs, is to become Foreign Minister. Economy and Finance Minister General Marcos Torres will assume the Vice-Presidential post. Asdrubal Chavez, cousin of late President Hugo Chavez, will succeed Ramirez at the ministry, while PDVSA head of exploration Eulogio del Pino gets a promotion to company president. Erstwhile Foreign Minister Elias Jaua is now minister of Communes and Social Movements and vice president for Development of Domestic Socialism. Ricardo Melendez will remain as vice president for Planning and Knowledge, Maduro said, while Dante Rivas is leaving the position of trade minister to head a new agency dedicated to cutting red tape. (Fox News Latino: http://latino.foxnews.com/latino/politics/2014/09/03/venezuela-maduro-shakes-up-cabinet/)

Maduro replaces reform minded economic zar
Rafael Ramírez, who oversaw Venezuela's oil industry for more than a decade, was removed from that role in a cabinet shake-up announced by President Nicolás Maduro. Ramírez had served as Maduro's top economic adviser and was scheduled to lead an investor road show this month in New York in search of financing for the cash-strapped government. He was one of the most vocal proponents of economic overhauls such as slashing domestic gasoline subsidies and simplifying a cumbersome foreign-exchange system, two areas where the government has been bleeding money. But a long delay in announcing policy overhauls has led economists and political analysts to question whether Maduro has the political muscle to implement potentially painful measures like those proposed by Ramírez. Instead, they say that the president appears unwilling to break with radicals in his ruling Socialist party who strongly oppose such measures as capitalist reforms that would hurt the poor. "The sidelining of Ramírez to the Foreign Ministry means that the hard-core communist left has won out," said Russ Dallen, partner at brokerage Caracas Capital Markets. (The Wall Street Journal: http://online.wsj.com/articles/venezuelan-president-replaces-oil-minister-rafael-ramirez-1409713741; El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/140903/venezuelan-president-maduro-announces-cabinet-reshuffle; http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/140904/cabinet-reshuffle-in-venezuela-maduro-adjourns-economic-measures; AVN, http://www.avn.info.ve/contenido/new-government-structure-makes-state-tool-economic-prosperity; Latin American Herald Tribune, http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=2350779&CategoryId=10717, http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=2350700&CategoryId=10717; Reuters, http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/09/03/venezuela-cabinet-idUSL1N0R404W20140903; http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/09/03/us-venezuela-cabinet-oil-idUSKBN0GY2O320140903; Veneconomy, http://www.veneconomy.com/site/index.asp?ids=44&idt=40903&idc=4; El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/140904/analyst-cabinet-shake-up-deprived-ramirez-of-control-over-pdvsa; Fox News, http://www.foxnews.com/world/2014/09/03/venezuela-president-replaces-longtime-oil-chief-as-part-cabinet-shakeup/)

Military controls productive and financial policy
The new Venezuelan cabinet proves the military is in control of productive and financial affairs. General Rodolfo Marco Torres was confirmed as Minister for Economy and Finance and named Vice President for Economic Affairs, replacing Rafael Ramírez. Torres, who is also a director at the Central Bank, will now be in charge of a number of steps such as the "fiscal revolution", exchange policy and the price of gasoline. Military presence was also expanded by naming Air Force Major General Giuseppe Yoffreda as Air and Aquatic Transportation Minister, in charge of negotiating the government's outstanding debt with international airlines. Yoffreda is also President of the Venezuelan Foreign Trade Corporation (CORPOVEX), in charge of government and private sector imports. Lieutenant Colonel Yván Bello has been named Nutrition Minister, in charge of importing and distributing food. Lieutenant José David Cabello was confirmed as Minister for Industries, National Tax Superintendent and is a board member in the Foreign Trade Center (CENCOEX). Army Lieutenant Jesse Chacón remains as Minister for Electric Energy. According the ECOANALÍTICA think tank cabinet changes underscore that "the government is controlled by radicals and the military, and...they get on very well. They like control, planning, and it allows them to keep on enjoying their privileges as a caste", and adds they " will do whatever they can to keep the status quo, even if it means taking half measures as mere stop gaps". The report does not rule out that at some time they may resort to devaluation, increasing controlled prices and renegotiating foreign debt. More in Spanish: (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/140905/militares-controlan-areas-productiva-y-financiera; and El Nacional; http://www.el-nacional.com/)

Business regrets lack of economic policy decisions
Ismael Pérez-Vigil, Executive President of the nation's Industrial Federation (CONINDUSTRIA) says "we had expectations that in addition to changes within the Cabinet, some economic policy guidelines would be outlined...unfortunately it was not what we believe the country needs at this time". FEDECAMARAS President Jorge Roig welcomed changes involving PDVSA and the Ministry of Mining and Oil, but said “what now is needed to learn if whether there is going to be a change in the game scheme which is what all Venezuelans are waiting for.” (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/140904/empresarios-lamentan-falta-de-decisiones-economicas; and Veneconomy, http://www.veneconomy.com/site/index.asp?ids=44&idt=40923&idc=4)

Opposition leaders reject changes that do not face up to economic crisis
Opposition spokesmen decried the fact that President Maduro has avoided facing up to the nation's economic crisis and concentrated his speech on bureaucratic changes without changing course on the economy. Miranda Governor Henrique Capriles says "a shakeup must take place in order to increase domestic productivity, generate investor confidence and create jobs". He adds it adds up to "the same faces exchanging chairs", and criticized Maduro for claiming success when "the reality is that companies are bankrupt, they have destroyed production and the results are scarcity and long lines". The Democratic Unity Conference (MUD) issued a statement saying: "Maduro wasted a clear opportunity...and instead spoke of a country that merely exists in his imagination, made cosmetic changes" that do not lead to the solving of the main problems affecting Venezuelans and they will merely make the country’s crisis to worsen. (Veneconomy, http://www.veneconomy.com/site/index.asp?ids=44&idt=40922&idc=1; El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/140904/venezuelan-opposition-castling-moves-fail-to-tackle-economic-crisis; and more in Spanish: El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/140904/oposicion-rechaza-reacomodos-que-no-atacan-crisis-economica; http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/140904/advierten-que-avanza-la-radicalizacion-del-modelo; http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/140904/sacudon-sirvio-para-quitarle-a-ramirez-el-control-de-pdvsa. (El Mundo, http://www.elmundo.com.ve/noticias/economia/banca/mud--gobierno-ratifico-modelo-economico-fracasado.aspx#ixzz3CLQdzRig)

Senator  Rubio again calls for US sanctions on the Maduro regime
Republican Senator Marco Rubio has called on Senator Harry Reid, the leader of the Democratic majority in the Senate, to bring the law that seeks sanctions on the Maduro regime to a vote, and claims the Venezuelan government has found ways to influence Congress in order to delay legislation on the matter, particularly through Senator Mary Landrieu (D-La), who is seeking a fourth term in November. More in Spanish: (Diario 2001, http://www.2001.com.ve/en-la-calle/senador-de-eeuu-vuelve-a-presionar-para-imponer-sanciones-al-gobierno-de-maduro.html)

Colombia expelled Venezuelan opposition activist Lorent Saleh
The Colombian government has expelled Lorent Saleh, the head of an NGO called "Operation Freedom", and turned him over to Venezuelan immigration authorities. More in Spanish: (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/140905/colombia-expulsa-al-opositor-venezolano-lorent-saleh)

Samper expects to discuss "dialogue" with Maduro
Ernesto Samper, newly appointed Secretary General of the Union of South American Nations (UNASUR) says he "hopes to discuss with President Maduro...ways to reactivate the political talks sponsored by the Foreign Ministers of Colombia, Ecuador and Brazil....which is currently frozen, not broken." More in Spanish: (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/140905/samper-espera-hablar-con-maduro-sobre-el-dialogo)


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, September 2, 2014

September 02, 2014

International Trade

Cargo arrived at Puerto Cabello:
  • 1,799 tons of milk, margarine and concentrated cream from Argentina to the Corporación de Abastecimientos y Servicios Agrícolas (CASA) government agency
  • Another 684 tons of margarine from Brazil, also for CASA.
  • Over 900 tons of medicines from DHL México to its local affiliate, and Abbott Laboratories sent another 220 tons of medicines to its own local affiliate.
  • Over 200 tons of apples from Chile to empresa Limitada Importación y Exportación, consigned by Venezuela's Industrial Bank.  

Food imports rose by more than 76%
The National Statistics Institute (INE) reports animal and vegetable product imports were up to US$ 2.936 billion January to May this year, 76,7% increase from US$ $1.661 billion during the same time frame last year - despite a 20% drop in total imports during the same period. Food products share in the total import mix also rose - by 120% - from 8.85% to 19.54% of all imports. More in Spanish: (Ultimas Noticias, http://www.ultimasnoticias.com.ve/noticias/actualidad/economia/ine-registra-que-importaciones-de-alimentos-subier.aspx#ixzz3C9fM7otd)

Prosecutor General reports 232 people arrested for outbound smuggling
Prosecutor General Luisa Ortega Díaz reports 232 people have been arrested since August 12th for alleged smuggling of food, fuel and strategic material. She also says 49 people are subject to cautionary measures for smuggling-related offenses. In addition, 10 civilians and 15 officials of the Bolivarian National Army will be brought to court. (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/140829/attorney-general-232-people-arrested-for-smuggling)


Logistics & Transport

Puerto Cabello ranked 22nd among Latin American ports
América Economía magazine has ranked the Puerto Cabello maritime terminal 22nd among the top 100 Latin American ports. More in Spanish: (Notitarde; http://www.notitarde.com/La-Costa/Puerto-Cabello-entre-los-mejores-puertos-de-Latinoamerica-2225669/2014/08/30/349792; Ultimas Noticias, http://www.ultimasnoticias.com.ve/noticias/actualidad/economia/puerto-cabello-entre-los-100-mejores-puertos-de-la.aspx)


Oil & Energy

Andres Oppenheimer: Venezuela: From oil power to oil importer 
President Nicolás Maduro’s government plans to start importing crude oil for the first time in order to blend it with Venezuela’s own crude and keep the country’s overall production from falling further. It turns out that Venezuela’s own production of light crudes has plummeted since the late President Hugo Chávez took office in 1999, and the country desperately needs light crudes to blend with its Orinoco Basin extra heavy crude oils. Without such a blend, the Orinoco Basin’s extra heavy crude is too dense to be transported through pipelines to Venezuelan ports and exported abroad. In 1999, when Chávez took office, PDVSA had 51,000 employees and produced 63 barrels of crude a day per employee. Fifteen years later, PDVSA had 140,000 employees, and produced 20 barrels of crude a day per employee. Venezuela’s net oil exports have plummeted from 3.1 million barrels a day in 1997 to 1.7 million barrels a day in 2013, according to U.S. Energy Information Administration estimates. (The Miami Herald, http://www.miamiherald.com/2014/08/30/4319013/andres-oppenheimer-venezuela-from.html#story_link=email_msg#storylink=cpy)

Venezuela's PDVSA puts exports of diluted crude for October on hold
Traders report Venezuela's state-run oil company PDVSA has put on hold plans to export diluted crude oil (DCO) in October while it reviews rising production costs as a result of imports of pricey naphtha that it uses to mix with extra heavy crude. The move comes as the company scrambles to cut costs to partially solve its cash flow problems. One of several sources who were told of the halt by the company said it might also try to raise DCO prices to better offset import costs. (Reuters, http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/08/29/oil-venezuela-exports-idUSL1N0QZ2HR20140829; El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/140830/pdvsa-suspends-export-of-diluted-crude-oil-in-october)

PDVSA’s debt to the Central Bank (BCV) exceeds its exports estimated to hit US$80 billion by the end of this year. According to official figures published by the BCV, by July 27, PDVSAs debt had increased 156% to US$ 82 billion, at the Bs.6.30:$ official rate. (Veneconomy, http://www.veneconomy.com/site/index.asp?ids=44&idt=40841&idc=4)

Gasoline smuggled to Colombia causes US$ 2.2 billion yearly loss to Venezuela
Smuggling of over 45,000 barrels of gasoline to Colombia causes the Venezuelan government to lose some US$ 2.2 billion per year, according to Asdrubal Chávez, PDVSA's President for Refining and Petrochemicals. He said the largest portion of illegal trade in gasoline takes place in Apure, Táchira, Zulia and Amazonas states. More in Spanish: (AVN; http://www.avn.info.ve/contenido/contrabando-gasolina-colombia-genera-2200-millones-p%C3%A9rdidas-anuales-al-pa%C3%ADs)

Venezuela oil price bounces slightly off 3 year slump
Venezuela's weekly oil basket bounced off its lowest level since 2011 as US oil markets went into their final weekend of the summer. 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 29 was US$ 91.77, up US$ 0.88 from the previous week's US$ 90.89. (Latin American Herald Tribune, http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=2350202&CategoryId=10717)


Commodities

Fitful supplies causes lines in Venezuelan food retailers
The government has decided to implement fingerprint-reading machines in order to reduce lines of clients at the doors of stores to buy products of the basic food basket. The move intends to monitor consumption levels, instead of tackling the real cause for long lines in supermarkets - regulated prices which translate into product resale and shortages.
Product shortages here are also caused by poor domestic production as a result of a limited supply of FOREX to import essential supplies and raw material to produce food, personal care and cleaning products.
Luis Rodríguez, President of the National Association of Supermarkets (ANSA), explains that product distribution has changed: food retailers now receive a different item every day and people need to buy groceries on a daily basis, "because flour is available one day, cooking oil is sold another day, then the soap, and so on. Therefore, lines are never-ending, because demand focuses on the products of the basic basket," he reports.
(El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/140901/fitful-supply-causes-lines-in-venezuelan-food-retailers)


Economy & Finance

ECOANALÍTICA terms Venezuela's economic situation "alarming"
The most recent report by the ECOANALÍTICA think tank terms Venezuela's economic situation "alarming", and "more serious than a traditional recession". It points out that the nation faces an aggressive cutback in FOREX allocations and an environment that is "hostile to the private sector". More in Spanish: (El Nacional; http://www.el-nacional.com/)

Suits against Venezuela currently underway at ICSID could bring on US$ 24 billion indemnity payments
The World Bank's International Center for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID) is currently processing 28 cases against Venezuela, and total decisions involved could strongly impact national finances. A study by Scotia Bank indicates that cases against Venezuela brought by EXXON MOBIL, CONOCO PHILLIPS and GOLD RESERVE upon expropriation could come due very shortly. Scotia estimates these three cases could cost the nation US$ 16 billion and total outstanding cases could raise the amount to US$ 24 billion. More in Spanish: (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/140902/juicios-en-ciadi-obligarian-a-cancelar-24-millardos

BANCTRUST is predicting 35% scarcity in 2015
BANCTRUST estimates scarcity here during 2015 at an average 35%, 2 percentage points higher than at present. It believes inflation will reach 73% this year, and says PDVSA remains in a very unfavorable financial position since it must sell its export dollars to the Central Bank at VEB 6.3/US$1. More in Spanish: (El Nacional; http://www.el-nacional.com/)

Economic indicators are also scarce in Venezuela
Prices climb daily in Venezuela, economic activity grinds to a halt and staples are scarce, but nothing can be measured and officially proven since the Central Bank started cutting back on statistics. Experts analysts speak of a "political intention" in the manipulation of statistics and warn that "credibility is being destroyed", recalling the ghosts of Argentina - where alteration led to parallel private statistics in order to estimate the real situation. Data on inflation - the responsibility of the Central Bank and the National Statistics Institute - has been withheld for the past 50 days since inflation hit 61% in May.  No explanation has been given despite protests from economists, political parties and the press. More in Spanish: (El Mundo, http://www.elmundo.com.ve/noticias/economia/politicas-publicas/analisis-afp---en-venezuela-escasean-los-indices-m.aspx#ixzz3C3vK35Yf)

Tumbling oil prices deepen economic turbulence in Venezuela
Investors are raising their risk perception and reducing the amount of Venezuelan bonds in their portfolios, while the Venezuelan government puts off the implementation of economic measures and oil prices decline. SÍNTESIS FINANCIERA, a local economic think tank explains: "A series of unfortunate events is harming Venezuela's country risk perception in the markets. The price of Venezuelan bonds recorded serious declines last week as the market was disappointed at the lack of economic decisions and a deeper fall in oil prices".
As of Monday, August 25, the trend continued, and bonds issued by Venezuela and state-run oil giant Petróleos de Venezuela (PDVSA) kept on falling. David Alayón, director of Kapital Consultores, explains that benchmark bond Venezuela Global 27 stood at 86.60% of its value on July 29, and by August 25, it ended at 77.84% of its value, which means an 8.8-point fall.
(El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/140830/tumbling-oil-prices-deepen-economic-turbulence-in-venezuela)

Liquidity and FOREX scarcity trigger the parallel exchange market
On March 23rd, the government launched SICAD 2 (second Ancillary Foreign Currency Administration System) in an attempt to restrain the constant surge of the parallel dollar, used to set prices for a broad range of products and ultimately boosting inflation. Although the initiative appeared initially successful, the greenback is now back on an upward trend, making the imbalance in currency exchange policies even worse. Through SICAD 2, both companies and individuals may purchase FOREX at a price ranging from VEB 49 to VEB 51 per US dollar. At the time the system was launched, the gap between the parallel dollar and the Sicad 2 exchange rate sat at 60% and gradually fell to 40%, but by the end of this week it made its way back up to 64%. (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/140830/liquidity-and-lack-of-dollars-trigger-the-parallel-exchange-market)


Politics

Maduro once again announces an imminent government shakeup
President Nicolás Maduro has asked his supporters to be "on the alert" today for a number of decisions on the economy, "renewing and shaking up the government and governing methods, as well as priorities". He says he expects the full support of the Socialist Party and the people for decisions he first announced he would take 96 days ago. Another 15 days have gone by since he announced that the entire Cabinet had tendered its resignation. He reportedly has before him a full plan prepared by Vice President Jorge Arreaza, Industries Minister Ricardo Menéndez, and Orlando Borrego, a former advisor to "Che" Guevara. Some reports indicate Rafael Ramírez will withdraw from the Ministry of Oil and Energy, and PDVSA, in order to replace Jorge Arreaza as Vice President. Diosdado Cabello and Elías Jaua are also mentioned as possible replacements for Arreaza, who might become Foreign Minister. More in Spanish: (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/140902/maduro-pide-apoyo-al-pueblo-para-medidas-que-anuncia-hoy; and Infolatam)

Venezuela has spent US$ 250 million to lobby the US
Venezuela has used three legal ways available in the United States to lobby and influence decision making, and paid out US$ 20,722,646. In 1999-2014, state-run oil holding PDVSA and its US subsidiary, CITGO Petroleum, invested US$ 4,433,933 and US$ 5,483,993 respectively, in lobbying the US Congress, for a total of US$ 9,917,986, according to Openscrets.org, a political liability center, and Sunlight Foundation. Both organizations track and break down data on the US legislature. (El Universal, http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/140830/venezuela-has-spent-usd-250-million-to-lobby-in-the-united-states)

Venezuelan capital in free fall, on par with war zones
Caracas is only one of four cities in the world, and the only one in the Americas, to have experienced an abysmal decline in its quality of life over the past five years. The only cities that have experienced worse drops in “livability” are those mired in armed conflict: Kiev, Ukraine; Tripoli, Libya; and Damascus, Syria. This is according to information provided by the Intelligence Unit of the Economist in their latest Global Liveability Ranking and Report published in August. The study evaluated 30 factors related to stability, health, education, infrastructure, culture, and environment in 140 cities around the world. The capital of Venezuela, which ranked 126 of 140, is the only city in the Americas to have experienced such a drastic decline across the relevant indicators since 2009. In the last five years, Caracas has seen a 6.4% drop in its quality of life, on par with the five point decline of Cairo, Egypt. (Panampost, http://panampost.com/elisa-vasquez/2014/08/25/caracas-a-livable-city-new-index-says-not-on-your-life/)



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.