Atlantico Weekly

Archive for the ‘Argentina’ Category

Brazil news update, December 20th

In Agriculture, Argentina, Banking, Brazil, Economy, Investments, Mining, Oil, Politics, Polls, Ports, Security, Tourism on December 20, 2009 at 7:28 pm

OIL & GAS

Brazil’s state-run oil company Petrobras agreed to pay tens of millions of dollars more per year for imported Bolivian natural gas after a price dispute that has dragged on for years (Reuters).

Brazilian increases in oil production, along with Russia, is threatening the OPEC’s (Organization for Petroleum Exporting Countries) control over oil prices. The current view of petroleum reserves may be deceptive as production, and most of all exportation, seem to be the determinant variable of the oil market equation (Rio Times).

Petrobras will get a 2.6 billion-real ($1.46 billion) loan from Brazil’s development bank, known as BNDES, to help finance construction of the Suape petrochemical complex (Bloomberg).

BUSINESS

Brazil’s CSN offered to buy Portuguese cement producer Cimpor for 3.86 billion euros ($5.6 billion) as the steelmaker slowly diversifies from its core business outside its home base (Reuters).

Brazilian meat processor Marfrig Alimentos received European Union regulatory approval for its takeover of local poultry export company Seara in a deal worth about $900 million (Reuters).

Fiat’s commercial vehicles unit Iveco has won a $3.37 billion contract to supply 2,044 armoured personnel carriers to the Brazilian army, Iveco said (Reuters). The vehicles will be produced in Brazil.

Junior miner MMX, owned by Brazilian magnate Eike Batista, will invest up to $1.2 billion to more than triple iron ore production capacity by 2015, the company’s president said (Reuters).

POLITICS

Brazil’s central bank chief, Henrique Meirelles, said he was not interested in running for the vice-presidency in next October’s election and had not decided whether to step down in April (Reuters).

The governor of Brazil’s central Minas Gerais state said he would no longer seek to become the presidential candidate for the opposition PSDB party in next October’s election (Reuters).

Brazil’s president will propose a truth commission this month to investigate torture during the country’s 1964-85 military dictatorship. The move by President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva could mark a rare step by Brazil toward tackling the thorny question of dictatorship-era abuses (Reuters).

FINANCE

As Brazil emerges stronger than many other countries from the deepest global recession in decades, the time may have come for the largest private equity firms to plant roots in Latin America’s biggest economy (Reuters).

Banco do Brasil, Latin America’s largest bank by assets, is in talks to buy a stake in Argentina’s Banco Patagonia in what would be the state-run bank’s biggest international foray (Reuters).

SECURITY

One minute Victor Javier was rapt in a carefree game of beach soccer; the next he was a hapless victim of Rio de Janeiro’s “shock of order” crackdown. Rio state this month hired former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, who takes credit for cleaning up the Big Apple, to help advise it on the Brazilian city’s crime problems (Reuters).

ECONOMY

After months of bullish forecasts from analysts in Brazil and around the world, the economic recovery has proven to have progressed at a significantly slower rate than has been anticipated over the last financial quarter (Rio Times).

The Brazilian government has announced that the bidding process for the construction and operation of a high-speed rail line that will link Rio de Janeiro, Sao Paulo and Campinas is to begin (Rio Times).

Chile and Brazil form part of 10- country group called ‘advanced emerging markets,’ Barclays Plc said. Singapore, Korea, Taiwan, Israel, China, South Africa, Poland and the Czech Republic are also part of the group, Barclays analysts including Eduardo Levy-Yeyati wrote in a report (Bloomberg).

Angola news update September 20th

In Airports, Angola, Argentina, Banking, Economy, Energy, Foreign Trade, Investments, Oil, Ports, South Africa, Tourism, Travel on September 20, 2009 at 12:26 pm

INVESTMENT

About USD 600 billion is required in the next 15 years for the country to reduce its dependence on oil, the Angolan economist Alves da Rocha stated. According to him the country will need to invest that amount in order to have an industrial economy in transition to one of services by 2025, with the manufacturing industry representing 30 percent of the GDP and services sector 25% ANGOP).

OIL

The Angolan fuel distributing company SONANGOL is ready to face competition that will result from the opening of the national market to others operators of the fuel trading area (ANGOP).

Angola’s daily crude oil shipments are scheduled to drop about 6 percent in November, bringing exports from Africa’s second-biggest producer closer to its OPEC quota (Bloomberg).

GAS

Angola’s first liquified natural gas (LNG) plant is on track to start shipping gas in January 2012, Oil Minister Jose Botelho de Vasconcelos said Reuters).

EXPANSION

Angola’s state oil company Sonangol is interested in acquiring a minority stake in Portuguese utility EDP, Sonangol CEO Manuel Vicente said (Reuters).

ECONOMY

Angolan government officials will meet representatives of the International Monetary Fund in Istanbul later this month as the African country seeks help to shore up its economy (Bloomberg).

ATLANTICO

South Africa’s power utility Eskom recently agreed to assist Angola develop its large hydroelectric power potential of up to 10,000 megawatts following a state-visit by South African President Jacob Zuma to Luanda last month (Reuters).

A group of thirty businessmen from Argentina will attend a seminar on “Business Opportunities” from sept 27 to 29 in Luanda, the Argentine ambassador to Angola, Ricardo Victor Roggero, disclosed (ANGOP).

PORTS

Angola’s Sociedade Gestora de Terminais (Sogester) has invested US$8 million in construction of a provisional second line terminal, in the Viana industrial area, whilst it waits for conclusion of its permanent terminal being built in Cacuaco municipality in Luanda (Macauhub).

Sea transport company Maersk Angola is investing US$95 million in Angola in the construction of a second line terminal in Luanda in order to boost its port infrastructure area, Angolan newspaper O País reported (Macauhub).

BANKING

The National Bank of Angola (BNA) has given the “green light” to the creation of an investment bank by Angolan oil company Sonangol and Portuguese state bank Caixa Geral de Depósitos (CGD) (Macauhub).

TOURISM

Around 300,000 tourists visited Angola in 2008, a rise of around 60 percent against the previous year, according to official figures published in Luanda (Macauhub).

South American regional bank expected in May

In Argentina, Banking, Brazil, Economy, Investments on March 25, 2009 at 1:37 pm

The Bank of the South, a regional bank that Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez envisions as South America’s answer to U.S.-influenced international lenders, will be launched with $10 billion in startup capital, Venezuela’s finance chief says.

Read the news feature in the International Herald Tribune

Brazil news update, March 21th

In Argentina, Banking, Brazil, Economy, Elections, Energy, Investments, Oil, Politics, Polls, Security, Tourism, Travel on March 21, 2009 at 5:23 pm

BANKING & FINANCE

Brazil’s national development bank is looking to loan up to $700 million to Argentina’s national airline to buy Brazilian-made planes (IHT).

Banco Azteca, the financing arm of Mexico’s Grupo Elektra, plans to expand in Brazil with new branches and possibly through takeovers, betting that demand from low-income consumers will grow despite the global economic downturn (Reuters).

ECONOMY

Brazil’s economy added more than 9,000 jobs in February after three straight months of job losses. The Labor Ministry reports that the gain, while small, is vital in the climate of a global economic crisis (IHT).

Brazil’s government said on Thursday it will reduce its primary budget surplus target in 2009 and freeze less spending than initially planned even after a sharply slowing economy caused tax income to tumble (Reuters).

BUSINESS

German truckmaker MAN AG said Tuesday the company completed the €1.2 billion ($1.5 billion) purchase of Volkswagen AG’s truck and bus operations in Brazil, announced in December (IHT).

Gol Airlines, Brazil’s second-biggest airline, said its fourth-quarter net loss widened after a weaker currency boosted financial expenses and costs to lease planes (Bloomberg).

Brazil’s largest meat processor, Sadia, said it was considering a business tie-up with Perdigao, another major meat processor and exporter (Reuters). But Perdigao and Sadia likely won’t merge, wrote an analyst based in Sao Paulo, citing a statement by Perdigao posted yesterday on Brazil’s securities regulator Web site and talks with the company’s management. Perdigao said in the statement that it didn’t reach an agreement with Sadia and currently isn’t in talks for a takeover (Bloomberg).

New vehicle sales in Brazil rose 4.4 percent in the first half of March to 123,757 units, the country’s dealership federation said on its Web site today (Bloomberg).

Electrobras, Latin America’s largest utility, plans to help finance 30.2 billion reais ($13.2 billion) of investments through 2012 to expand Brazilian electricity output and transmission as demand for power grows (Bloomberg).

Brazil’s Air Force will help finance the $500 million development of a new Embraer military transport aircraft, which the company seeks to sell to armed forces around the world, the Estado de S. Paulo reported (Bloomberg).

OIL & GAS

Brazil’s president says a new natural gas terminal will reduce the nation’s dependence on buying the fuel from Bolivia (IHT).

Oil workers at state-controlled Brazilian energy firm Petrobras will strike for five days from Monday and attempt to cut crude output in protest over job cuts, pay and working conditions (Reuters).

Greek owned DryShips Inc said its unit Ocean Rig ASA has won a three-year $630 million drilling contract from Petrobras , Brazil’s state-controlled oil company, sending its shares up 28 percent (Reuters).

Brazil needs $270 billion in investment over the next 10 years to develop massive new deepwater oil reserves, its energy minister said on Thursday (Reuters).

Petrobras  said it signed 2.89 billion reais ($1.28 billion) of contracts for an oil refinery in Brazil, moving ahead without partner Petroleos de Venezuela (Bloomberg)

SECURITY

Iran is increasing its activity in Latin America and the Caribbean, including actions aimed at supporting the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah, a top U.S. military commander said on Tuesday (Reuters).

Brazilian President Lula da Silva will propose the creation of a Latin American council to combat drug trafficking in the region (Bloomberg).

Argentina and Uruguay

In Argentina, Banking, Economy, Investments, Uruguay on February 5, 2009 at 7:19 pm

URUGUAY, lying just across the muddy waters of the River Plate from Argentina, has been fated in recent decades both to be buffeted by, and to benefit from, its big neighbour’s secular instability. Argentina’s economic collapse of 2001-2 duly prompted a bank run and recession in Uruguay. While Argentina defaulted on its debt, nationalised foreign businesses and imposed price controls, Uruguay quietly reached an amicable rescheduling agreement with its creditors. It stuck to its orthodox ways even after the leftish Broad Front of President Tabaré Vázquez came to power in 2005. Now it is reaping some benefit.

Read the full story in The Economist

Argentina forecast

In Argentina, Economy on January 10, 2009 at 4:04 pm

Read the forecast at the Economist Intelligence Unit

Argentina sees 2009 growth 4 pct

In Argentina, Economy on January 4, 2009 at 12:17 am

BUENOS AIRES, Dec 30 (Reuters) – Argentina’s central bank forecast on Tuesday that economic growth will hover near 4 percent next year, with consumer inflation of 7 percent, echoing similar forecasts in the government’s 2009 budget.

Read the news feature at Reuters

Argentina looks to SA for mining know-how

In Argentina, Mining, South Africa on December 22, 2008 at 7:19 pm

The Buenos Aires government has started to focus on the growing minerals sector, believed to be the next pillar of Argentina’s economy.

Read the news story at Business Day

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