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Non-Tech : The Brazil Board -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (1328)11/17/2013 11:03:30 PM
From: elmatador1 Recommendation

Recommended By
DewDiligence_on_SI

  Respond to of 2504
 
As the plan Message 29232689 did not work this time: reports of the death of emerging markets have been greatly exaggerated.

“This year Latin America was very affected by emerging market outflows after [Federal Reserve chairman] Bernanke warned about tapering.

As the plan did not work this time: reports of the death of emerging markets have been greatly exaggerated.

“This year Latin America was very affected by emerging market outflows after [Federal Reserve chairman] Bernanke warned about tapering.

High spirits in Latin America help stem fears of leaner times

By John Paul Rathbone

Growth spurt: some believe value is starting to emerge in Brazil

To paraphrase Mark Twain, reports of the death of emerging markets have been greatly exaggerated.

Yes, investors threw a “taper tantrum” in May and yanked billions of dollars out of emerging markets on worries that the US Federal Reserve was about to end its tapering programme, effectively marking the beginning of a period of higher US interest rates.

Yes, there are questions about how much longer China will continue to grow as fast as it has been, which has implications for commodity prices and thus especially Latin America, which has profited hugely from the Asian-fuelled commodity price boom of the past decade.

And, yes, Latin America has just suffered its largest ever corporate default after Eike Batista, the Brazilian entrepreneur, declared bankruptcy, meaning no payment on $6bn of his companies’ bonds.

Even so, capital remains abundant in the region for now. Debt issuance is heading for a record year, with $129bn of bonds placed in the first nine months of 2013, according toDealogic. Equity capital markets are ticking over, with $28bn of issuance in the year to September compared with the $25bn annual average over the past five years.

Mergers and acquisitions are holding steady, with $72bn of deals not quite last year’s bumper tally of $110bn over the same period, yet only just short of the five-year average.

“Last year, markets shut down with the Greece scare in May and then opened up again in September with huge volumes,” observes Antonia Stolper, head of the Latin American capital markets practice at Shearman & Sterling, the law firm.

“This year Latin America was very affected by emerging market outflows after [Federal Reserve chairman] Bernanke warned about tapering. But markets only closed for a few weeks it was a much shorter shutdown.”

Market performance bears her out. The MSCI index of Latin American stocks dropped 22 per cent in the weeks following Mr Bernanke’s comments about Fed tapering. It has since recouped most of that loss to stand just 9 per cent down.

Bond yields have performed in similar fashion. The spread of JPMorgan’s Latin America emerging markets bond index over US Treasuries started the year at 317 basis points (bps), drifted higher and jumped to 463 bps at the end of June. Spreads have since drifted lower. At the end of October, the spread had shrunk to 402 bps.

“There was a very slow second quarter but in September and October we had a lot of issuance with a number of important transactions from major names,” says Roberto D’Avola, head of Latin American debt capital markets at JPMorgan.

“True, base rates are no longer the same as they were at the start of the year, but if you step back there are still good opportunities for issuers. I think issuance is going to continue.”

There are several reasons why issuance should continue. First, international interest rates remain attractive, even if no longer as rock bottom as they were.

“Issuers adjust their plans according to the cost of debt,” notes Mr D’Avola. “It’s a dynamic process.”

Second, national pension funds continue to support local markets, especially in the most developed markets such as Colombia, Chile, Mexico and Brazil. At the start of November, for example, Grupo Aval, Colombia’s largest financial group, announced a $1.3bn rights issue all of which will be placed locally.

And third, international and local companies continue to see attractive opportunities inside Latin America. Dealmakers say US companies are starting to look south to deploy their huge cash piles.

Bankers add that Asian companies are beginning to expand their interest in the region from beyond resource-based companies alone and into consumer goods and financial services, too. European companies are also seeing a chance to crystallise value in their Latin American businesses. The biggest example is the Brazilian operation of Telecom Italia, which may come up for sale in a deal putatively worth $9bn.

If anyone believes that Latin America is immediately heading into lean times, official forecasts and market prices have not caught up with them. It is true that the era of ever-risingcommodity prices, from which the region has gained so handsomely over the past decade, may be coming to a close.

Yet, commodity prices remain considerably higher than during the golden years of the mid-2000s. International capital flows remain abundant.

The Institute of International Finance estimates private inflows into Latin America will top $300bn this year, three times the amount that came into the region, on average, between 2003 and 2008. “If you are an issuer and looking at a long-term horizon, 10-year rates still look good now,” says Shearman’s Ms Stolper. “In fact, if you are operating in an economy like Peru’s that is growing at 5 per cent plus and have market access, borrowing rates remain beyond your dreams.”

None of this is to say the region will always enjoy the same relative abundance of recent years, and certainly not across all markets.

Exotics such as Honduras, which has issued a debut $500m bond at 7.5 per cent may no longer attract the same buyers as they did this year when some investors were desperate for yield pick-up. (Although Venezuela still seems to be able to tap China for funds, having secured another $5bn loan from the China Development Bank in September.)

Brazil also remains out of favour with investors although some believe value is now starting to emerge. In addition, Brazil’s coming year will be truncated by the World Cup in June and July, and presidential elections in October. Mr Batista’s default, although widely viewed as an isolated case, may also add a few points to Brazil’s risk premium.

Other markets remain hot favourites, especially reform-minded members of the so-called Pacific Alliance, which groups Chile, Colombia, Mexico and Peru. Of those countries, according to a fund manager survey by Latam Confidential, a sister publication of the Financial Times, Peru and Mexico are the top preferences.

Nonetheless, Mexico remains expensive, with a stock market trading on 18 times forward earnings, versus a Latin American average of 14 times.

For now, the big questions for 2014 are twofold. First, will Mexico drive forward with its reform agenda and liberalise its energy sector? If so, that could unleash a wave of cross-bordermergers and acquisitions and capital markets activity, bankers say.

Second, what will happen when US interest rates start to rise, as they surely will at some point?

“Emerging markets began, as an asset class, in the mid- to late-80s and since then have accompanied a long-term trend of falling US interest rates,” says Chris Gilfond, co-head of Latin American credit markets at Citi.

“The big question is what happens when that long-term interest rate cycle turns,” adds Mr Gilfond.

“Will Latin America return to the 1980s? I don’t think so, as there have been too many fundamental changes. But it will be a test.”



To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (1328)1/20/2014 11:16:17 PM
From: elmatador1 Recommendation

Recommended By
kidl

  Respond to of 2504
 
Still, the Brazil example gives rise to a question we don’t ask enough in this country:

What’s the point of economic growth if nobody has a job?

Does Brazil Have the Answer?
JAN. 20, 2014

Not long after I got back from my recent trip to Brazil, I called some economists to gain a better understanding of where the country stood economically. To me, Rio de Janeiro felt a little like Shanghai: there was plenty of high-end shopping in neighborhoods like Ipanema — and plenty of poverty in the favelas, or slums. There was also a lot in between. What is most striking to a visitor is how many middle-class citizens there seem to be. Cars were everywhere; traffic jams, I’ve come to believe, are a sign of a growing middle class. It means people have enough money to buy automobiles.

What I saw was no illusion. Though its starting point was quite extreme, Brazil is a country that has seen income inequality drop over the last decade. Unemployment is at near record lows. And the growth of the middle class is quite stunning. By most estimates, upward of 40 million people have been pulled out of poverty in the last decade; extreme poverty, says the government, has been reduced by 89 percent. Per capita income has continued to grow even as G.D.P. growth has slowed.

Nevertheless, the economists I spoke to were uniformly bearish about the short-term future of the Brazilian economy. They pointed, for starters, to that slowdown in G.D.P., which they didn’t expect to pick up anytime soon. Despite the country’s enormous economic gains since the beginning of this century, there has been very little accompanying productivity gains. Indeed, several economists told me that the main reason unemployment was so low was that the economy was terribly inefficient. Too much of the economy was in the hands of the state, I was told, and, what’s more, it was a consumption-based economy that lacked necessary investment. And on and on. I got the sense that many economists believe that Brazil had been more lucky than good, and now its luck was running out. In a recent article about the Brazilian economy, The Economist put it starkly: “ The Deterioration,” read its headline.

As I listened to the economists, though, I couldn’t help thinking about our own economy. Our G.D.P. growth was more than 4 percent in the third quarter of 2013, and, of course, our productivity has risen relentlessly. But, despite the growth, unemployment can’t seem to drop below 7 percent. And the middle class is slowly but surely being eviscerated — thanks, at least in part, to those productivity gains. Income inequality has become a fact of life in the United States, and while politicians decry that fact, they seem incapable of doing anything about it. Which made me wonder: Whose economy runs better, really?

A few years ago, Nicholas Lemann of The New Yorker wrote a lengthy article about Brazil in which he quoted from an email he received from Brazil’s president, Dilma Rousseff. “The main aim of economic development must always be the improvement of living conditions,” she told him. “You cannot separate the two concepts.”

In other words, Brazil’s admittedly leftist government doesn’t spend a lot of time worrying about growth for its own sake, but rather connects it with alleviating poverty and growing the middle class. Thus, it has a high minimum wage, for instance. It has laws making it exceedingly difficult to fire a laggard employee. It controls the price of gasoline, helping to make driving affordable.

RECENT COMMENTS
Anetliner Netliner 27 minutes agoBrazil's President Rousseff is indeed correct that the key goal of economic development should be to improve living conditions for the many....

RS 32 minutes agoNocera makes some good points. If a country like Brazil with a weak economy can steer GDP growth to decrease income inequality, then why...

Larry Eisenberg 43 minutes agoBless Joe Nocera and Brazil,Of job creation don't speak ill,A min wage that's high,Let plutocrats sigh,And one tenth percent foot the bill!

And most striking of all — at least from the point of view of an American — for the last 10 years, Brazil has had a program called Bolsa Família, which essentially hands money to mothers living in poverty. In return, they have to ensure that their children go to school and avail themselves of health care services. There is no question that Bolsa Família has been enormously effective in reducing poverty.

By contrast here in the United States, Congress just refused to extend unemployment insurance. The farm bill envisions cutting back on food stamps. Various other programs to help the poor or the unemployed have been reduced. Even those who oppose such heartless cuts assume that once the economy comes back, all will be well again. Growth will take care of everything. Thus in America, we tend to view economic growth less as a means to an end than an end in itself.

It is, of course, possible that Brazil’s economy could hit the wall and some of the gains made could be reversed. A new emphasis on investment and entrepreneurship could probably help it. The spontaneous protests last summer were the results of the new middle class wanting the sorts of things that the middle class always wants: better services, higher quality schools, less corruption. Still, the Brazil example gives rise to a question we don’t ask enough in this country:

What’s the point of economic growth if nobody has a job?



To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (1328)8/20/2014 4:00:26 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 2504
 
subsea oil and gas overall market will grow at a compound annual rate of 6.72% from 2014 to 2018 say the energy analysts in a recent report.


Latin America and Africa will dominate the segment.

The primary driver in Latin America is Brazil's presalt discoveries offshore in the Santos and Campos basins.

These ultra-deepwater fields are operated mostly by Petrobras, and Petrobras is expected to continue to be top global subsea investor in the next five years, capturing 25% of global capex.

In Africa, approximately 87% of subsea activity will be concentrated in the West Africa subregion, particularly offshore Angola, Nigeria, and Ghana. Key prospects include Total's CLOV project, Tullow's TEN development, and BP's PSVM cluster. Following gas discoveries offshore Mozambique in recent months, East Africa could join the continent's offshore subsea development list in the future

offshore-mag.com



To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (1328)8/28/2014 11:49:13 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 2504
 
Petrobras (PBR) Reaches 52-Week High on Recent Discoveries
Petroleo Brasileiro S.A. or Petrobras ( PBR - Analyst Report) ADRs hit a 52-week high of $19.32 on Aug 27, 2014. In fact, the Brazilian state-run energy giant has seen its stock price climb over 44% since the beginning of the year. The stock has been going strong following reports of recent oil discoveries.

Why Petrobras Reached A New 52-Week High
http://www.bidnessetc.com/24806-why-petrobras-reached-a-new-52week-high/


What is Driving the Stock?

On Aug 26, Petrobras confirmed the presence of gas and light oil in the second extension well, Moita Bonita -3. As per initial analysis, both oil and reservoir quality is good.

Brazil has huge oil/gas reservoirs that lie in deep and ultra-deep water. These reserves, estimated to hold 50 billion barrels, are widely thought to be the most important oil finds in recent years. Petrobras is the operator in most of these exploration areas, and holds interests ranging from 20% to 100%.

Moreover, the company recently announced a fourth oil discovery in the Jupiter area in Block BM-S-24 in the Santos Basin. The exploration and development of its available resources should help the company to reach its target of ranking among the top five integrated oil firms in the world by 2030.

Moreover, Petrobras has signed an agreement with the Bolivian state owned petrol company, YPFB, to settle interpretation differences regarding the Bolivian natural gas supply agreement. Though the lumpsum settlement fee may have negative effect in the upcoming results, undisrupted natural gas supply from the Bolivian market and preferential rights to the natural gas Petrobras discovers in Bolivia would prove beneficial for the company in the long run.

Zacks Rank & Stocks to Consider

Currently, Petrobras carries a Zacks Rank #3 (Hold), implying that it is expected to perform in line with the broader U.S. market in the next one to three months. As such, further upside potential from here may be limited.

Meanwhile, one can consider better-ranked players from the broader energy sector like Sunoco Logistics Partners L.P. ( SXL - Analyst Report), Patterson-UTI Energy Inc. ( PTEN - Analyst Report) and Cameron International Corporation ( CAM - Analyst Report). All these stocks sport a Zacks Rank #1 (Strong Buy).