Atlantico Weekly

Archive for the ‘Uruguay’ Category

Brazil news update, July 5th

In Banking, Brazil, Economy, Investments, Oil, Retail, Uruguay on July 5, 2009 at 11:56 am

OIL

Brazil’s state oil company Petrobras expects exploration of an Iranian block will yield disappointing results, a company director said, adding another Iranian block has shown similarly dim prospects (Reuters).

Petrobras also said it put up the winning bids for blocks 3 and 4 in Uruguay’s exploration and production bidding round for oil and gas (Reuters).

Petrobras has secured financing to cover its aggressive $174 billion investment plan through 2013, financial director Almir Barbassa said. Financing secured by the company includes 25 billion reais ($12.81 billion) from Brazil’s BNDES development bank, $6.5 billion from a pool of banks, $2 billion from the U.S. Exim Bank and $10 billion from the China Development Bank (Reuters).

Petrobras found more evidence of oil in an onshore block in the country’s Espirito Santo Basin, the Brazilian petroleum regulator said. The discovery was made at well 4BRSA742ES in the ES-T-382 block, the National Petroleum Agency said on its Web site. The Jacutinga field in the same block was declared a commercial find in a filing dated Jan. 3, 2008 (Bloomberg).

ECONOMY

Brazil’s economy will shrink 0.50 percent in 2009, less than the previous forecast for a 0.57 percent drop, according to the median forecast in a June 26 central bank survey of about 100 economists (Bloomberg).

INVESTMENT

Italian tire group Pirelli & C SpA will invest around $200 million in Brazil through 2011, betting on a swift and robust rebound in Latin America’s largest economy, the company said (Reuters).

RETAIL

New automobile sales in Brazil soared 21.5 percent in June from May, turning in a record month as a combination of tax breaks, lower prices and improved confidence prompted consumers to flock to showrooms, the national dealers’ association, Fenabrave, said (Reuters).

MEAT

Brazilian processed foods company Perdigao said that the European Commission had approved its takeover of local rival Sadia, paving the way for the creation of a multinational that will control a quarter of the world’s poultry market (Reuters).

BANKING & FINANCE

Brazil’s second-largest private-sector bank, Bradesco, is in talks to buy a minority stake in insurer Porto Seguro seeking to prevent rivals from gaining a foothold in the last independent insurer in the country, a local newspaper reported (Reuters).

Brazilian banks are “well- positioned” to weather the recession and falling interest rates, which will pressure profit margins, Fitch Ratings said. “Proactive measures” by the government have helped offset liquidity concerns, and banks should pass through the global financial crisis without a negative effect on their ratings. Slowing loan growth and record-low interest rates will lead to narrower margins this year and beyond (Bloomberg).

Banco do Brasil  has the capacity to lend an additional 80 billion reais ($41 billion) this year, bank President Aldemir Bendine told O Estado de S. Paulo newspaper. The Brasilia-based bank will probably resume talks to buy regional lender Banestes SA – Banco do Estado do Espirito Santo, Bendine told the newspaper, without providing a timeline. The bank is also negotiating the purchase of BRB Banco de Brasilia SA (Bloomberg).

BUSINESS

Germany’s Celesio has acquired a majority stake in Brazil’s largest drugs distributor Panpharma, Europe’s biggest drugs distributor said (Reuters).

SOCCER

Brazil is seeking a $1 billion loan from the Inter-American Development Bank for the 12 cities that will host the World Cup in 2014, Tourism Minister Luiz Eduardo Pereira Barreto Filho said (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

Uruguay GDP rose 13.2 pct from Jan-Sept

In Economy, Uruguay on January 4, 2009 at 12:21 am

MONTEVIDEO, Dec 17 (Reuters) – Uruguay’s economy grew 13.2 percent in the first nine months of the year compared with the same period in 2007, buoyed by booming pulp production, the central bank said.

Read the news feature at Reuters

Santander Uruguay’s biggest private bank

In Banking, Uruguay on January 4, 2009 at 12:19 am

MONTEVIDEO, Dec 23 (Reuters) – The Uruguayan affiliate of Spain’s largest bank, Santander (SAN.MC), said on Tuesday it had received government approval to incorporate ABN AMRO’s assets to form the largest private bank in Uruguay.

Read the news feature at Reuters

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