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Strategies & Market Trends : Telebras (TBH) & Brazil
TBH 0.404-14.1%Dec 31 3:59 PM EST

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To: Steve Fancy who wrote (9148)10/24/1998 2:58:00 PM
From: Steve Fancy  Read Replies (1) of 22640
 
Talks Between Brazil and IMF End Without Deal on Bailout

Associated Press

RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil -- The International
Monetary Fund and Brazil ended eight hours of talks
Friday without reaching an agreement on a bailout
package intended to help Brazil's slumping economy.

IMF spokesman Francisco Baker said the parties still
were working out ways to slash Brazil's budget deficit so
the country can qualify for a rescue package reportedly
worth $30 billion.

Stanley Fischer, IMF vice deputy managing director,
arrived in Rio early Friday and met with Brazilian
Finance Minister Pedro Malan and Central Bank
President Gustavo Franco. They both left after a few
hours without comment.

The talks about an aid package aimed at shoring up
investor confidence in Brazil continued between Mr.
Fischer and lower-level officials of the Brazilian Finance
Ministry.

"Discussions centered on reaching an accord between
Brazil and the IMF. The Brazilian government presented
the IMF details of an economic plan," said Finance
Ministry spokesman Joao Batista Magalhaes in a brief
statement following the meeting.

The talks were believed to hinge on what measures the
Brazilian government will take to reduce its ballooning
budget deficit of about $65 billion, or some 7% of the
country's gross domestic product. President Fernando
Henrique Cardoso is expected to announce the
measures next week.

In Buenos Aires on Thursday, Mr. Fischer spoke for the
first time of concrete figures, saying he believed Brazil
would need about $30 billion in emergency aid. He also
said the IMF would supply about half of that and the
money could be ready in about two weeks.

Mr. Fischer said that although there had been "important
advances," the IMF wanted to know exactly what the
Brazilian government intended to do with the money.

Brazil has been especially hard hit by the economic
turmoil affecting emerging markets. At the height of the
crisis, Brazilian stock exchanges lost nearly three
quarters of their value and the country has lost more than
$20 billion in foreign reserves.

Brazil's largest stock exchange, Sao Paulo's Bovespa,
lost 4.4% Friday after rising for four consecutive days on
hope that the announcement of the bailout package was
imminent.
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