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Strategies & Market Trends : Telebras (TBH) & Brazil -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Jerry A. Laska who wrote (6524)8/11/1998 4:34:00 PM
From: CuttotheCore  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 22640
 
Jerry, maybe it is because I don't trade with a tv nearby, but I thought we never hit the panic buttom, was kind of surprised. Think that a good deal of buying was coming into play at the close. Actually tried to pick up another position at close but didn't get in. Closing tick on the dow was 490, which was very bullish for such a day, w/ the trend at .96 (anything < 1.0 being positive), when the avg. had hit an incredably bearish 2.0 earlier. Be interesting what your part of the world does tonight.

In the meantime I went camping in the Blue Ridge last week. They caught the church arsonist about a hundred miles away, but nothing as exciting as your last trip! Actually was a tough week with
the mkt performing like it did and me getting to a telephone every so often.

Hoping for an improvement tomorrow.



To: Jerry A. Laska who wrote (6524)8/11/1998 6:25:00 PM
From: Steve Fancy  Respond to of 22640
 
Brazil Govt Wants Telefonica To Leave CRT - News Agency

Dow Jones Newswires

MADRID -- Telecoms giant Telefonica SA (TEF) should give up
management control of Companhia Riograndense de Telecomunicacoes,
the Brazilian government was reported as saying by Spanish news agency
EFE.

As a condition of Telefonica's entry into another fixed-line telecoms
company, Telesp Participacoes, the Spanish company has to reduce its
stake in CRT to less than 20% from the current 54%.

However, Telefonica said Monday it will continue to manage CRT even
after reducing its stake.

The Brazilian government reportedly criticized that plan. "The company
has to give up its majority stake and the management (of CRT) within 18
months," EFE reported vice-president of the National Bank of Social and
Economic Development, Jose Pio Borges, as saying.

EFE said the matter will be decided by the Brazilian telecoms regulator.

Nobody at the Brazilian government or at Telefonica could confirm EFE's
report.

-By Rupert Cocke; 34-91-399-3079; rcocke@ap.org




To: Jerry A. Laska who wrote (6524)8/11/1998 6:29:00 PM
From: Steve Fancy  Respond to of 22640
 
Brazil's Bovespa -4.5% At 1535 GMT; Telebras -5.1%

Dow Jones Newswires

SAO PAULO -- Brazilian stock prices were posting sharp losses at
midday Tuesday as markets slump worldwide on worries over the Asian
and Russian economies.

At 1545 GMT, the Sao Paulo Stock Exchange's Bovespa Index was off
321 points or 4.6% at 8761 after dropping as much as 5.7%. Volume was
moderate at 300 million reals (BRL) ($1=BRL1.17).

The benchmark stock Telebras was down 4.8% or BRL5.80 to
BRL114.20 per thousand shares.

Traders said they had detected some institutional support in Telebras on
Tuesday and late Monday.



To: Jerry A. Laska who wrote (6524)8/11/1998 6:30:00 PM
From: Steve Fancy  Respond to of 22640
 
Embratel Participacoes Hldrs Appoint New Interim Bd Members

Dow Jones Newswires

NEW YORK -- Embratel Participacoes SA shareholders approved a
new interim board, including an interim chairman, to serve during a period
of transition.

Embratel is the majority shareholder in Empresa Brasileira de
Telecomunicacoes SA, a long-distance company.

In a press release Tuesday, Embratel Participacoes shareholders
approved the naming of Luis Fernando Rodrigues as interim chairman.

Shareholders also named directors to serve on the board following the
transition period and named members of the fiscal council.

Fernando Rodrigues and Dilio Sergio Penedo, who was reelected a
director, will be president and vice president, respectively, of the executive
board.

Michael J. Rowny, executive vice president, ventures & alliances, and
acting chief financial officer of MCI Communications Corp. (MCIC), was
named president of the board.

Dan Crawford, MCI senior vice president, venture management, and Jerry
DeMartino, MCI senior vice president, global strategy & development,
will be directors following the brief transition period, the company said.

Sergio Penedo currently serves as president of Empresa Brasileira de
Telecomunicacoes. Fernando Rodrigues is president, MCI do Brasil.

A transition committee was established due to the recent privatization of
the company to assist in preparing for the beginning of competition.

MCI won the tender for 51.79% of the voting shares of Embratel
Participacoes.



To: Jerry A. Laska who wrote (6524)8/11/1998 6:32:00 PM
From: Steve Fancy  Respond to of 22640
 
Brazil July Federal Tax Revenue 10.49B Reals Vs 9.02B June

Dow Jones Newswires

BRASILIA -- The Brazilian government showed tax revenues of 10.49
billion reals (BRL)($1=BRL1.17) in July, up from receipts of BRL9.02
billion the previous month, the Federal Revenue Department reported
Tuesday.

The July figure is also higher than the BRL9.74 billion in receipts registered
in the same month in 1997.

Revenues for the first seven months of 1998 were BRL76.42 billion,
compared to BRL62.50 billion in the January-July period last year.



To: Jerry A. Laska who wrote (6524)8/11/1998 6:34:00 PM
From: Steve Fancy  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 22640
 
WRAP: Latin American Mkts Take Global Turmoil On The Chin

Dow Jones Newswires

NEW YORK -- Latin American markets completed the circle of global equity
losses Tuesday that started in Asia and spread through Europe before moving
onto the U.S.

From Mexico to Argentina, analysts said the forces hurting markets were
familiar ones: Japan's anemic currency and economy; fears of more currency
devaluations in Asia, including the Chinese yuan; the fragile financial situation in
Russia; and falling commodity prices, especially oil. Add to that a 200-plus
drop by the Dow Jones Industrial Average, and Latin American markets didn't
stand much of a chance.

Analysts say no one knows how any of these events will play out, and what
their longer-term impact on the global economy will be. That uncertainty sent
Mexico's IPC index down to close 2.8% lower while Brazil's Bovespa index
fell 4.1% and Argentina's Merval index dropped 4.4%.

But they say that despite plunging stock prices Tuesday, Latin America as a
whole - with the noticeable exception of Venezuela - is in better shape than six
months ago to absorb shocks originated from some other corner of the globe.

Regional giant Brazil - which came closer than any other Latin American
country to an Asia-induced currency devaluation - pulled off a highly successful
privatization of telecommunications giant Telecomunicacoes Brasileiras SA.
And President Fernando Henrique Cardoso is looking more and more likely to
win his second term in October elections with relative ease.

Paine Webber's senior sovereign analyst, Siobhan Manning, said that although
the sell-off was reminiscent of the one that started in late October, so far there
was little talk of crumbling Latin American economies.

"It seems that the crisis of confidence contagion hasn't hit Latin America full
blown," Manning said.

"At this point, I'm not pessimistic about Brazil," said Antonio Costa, director of
Oryx Asset Management in Sao Paulo. "My worries are about other Latin
American economies, like Chile, Mexico and Venezuela, because of how they
are affected by commodities markets."

Still, observers believed the Brazilian Central Bank sold between $150 million
and $200 million Tuesday to contain volatility in the spot and futures currency
markets and to bring the closing rate in line with the previous session's close of
1.1686 reals to the dollar.

In Brasilia, a Central Bank spokesman denied the monetary authority had
intervened, although traders said the contrary.

The Mexican peso, meanwhile, closed at a record low of 9.120 pesos per
dollar despite the central bank's moves Monday to tighten liquidity in the
money market and general consensus the government has taken the right fiscal
measures in recent months to compensate for lost oil revenue.

The stock market's IPC index had slumped more than 5.5% Tuesday before
recovering late in the day to close 2.8% lower at 3628.45 points.

In addition to low oil prices, investors are worried about whether Mexican
exports to the U.S. - by far its largest trading partner - will maintain a
competitive edge over Asian products if the yen and other Asian currencies
continue to drop.

"Cheaper Asian imports hitting the U.S. market could hurt Mexican exports,"
said Cesar Rafael Castro, head of economic analysis at Capem Oxford
Economic Forecasting in Mexico City.

The Chilean peso also came under pressure Tuesday, closing at 471.80 pesos
to the dollar from 470.00 on Monday. The stock exchange's IPSA index shed
3.1% to 82.42.

The global turmoil Tuesday aggravated Chilean markets already under
pressure from weak export prices on such goods as copper. The Central Bank
has repeatedly this year put the crunch on liquidity, forcing the interbank
lending rate far above its 8.5% target.

Chile is particularly vulnerable to problems in Asia because it has, for the last
few years, been sending about one-third of its exports to the region, notes Jose
Manual Silva, research head at Santiago brokerage Larrain Vial. Japan and
South Korea consistently rank among the five top importers of Chilean
products.

Argentina's interest rates haven't been effected by the Asian trouble - in large
part thanks to financial sector reforms instituted after the Mexican peso crisis
of 1995 - but some analysts say they might if problems continue.

"Without a doubt, the situation is better (than in 1995). But a continued
worsening of the situation in Russia and in Asia would clearly have an impact.
We could see higher interest rates, which would have an impact on economic
growth," said Raul Buonuome, chief economist at Deutsche Morgan Grenfell in
Buenos Aires.

And the sluggish commodities prices are a worry for Argentina. The Buenos
Aires Stock Exchange's Merval index finished Tuesday 4.4% lower at 489.66,
after plunging 7% early in the session.

Without a doubt, Latin America's biggest trouble spot is Venezuela, which is
facing political instability and a major budget shortfall because of plunging oil
prices. After a $500-million, 20-year bond issue in July, the government
expects to raise another $1.4 billion through international debt issues, probably
in September.

"The crisis is forcing Venezuela to go into the debt market at a very bad time,"
said Ricardo Penfold, chief analyst with Santander Investment in Caracas.

In addition, the country's financial markets are suffering from uncertainty over
who will win Dec. 6 elections.

"The bolivar has problems of its own," noted Penfold. Santander expects the
bolivar to end the year at 630 to the dollar, compared to Tuesday's close of
568.50 bolivars. The general stock index ended 4.6% lower at 3989.07.

Reinaldo Santana, equity analyst with Credit Lyonaise in Caracas, added that
cheaper foreign imports from Asia were damaging the fortunes of some
Venezuelan companies, notably textile producer Sudamtex, which recently
announced major staff cutbacks, and steel producer Sivensa. Paper company
Venepal closed two lines of production due to foreign competition.

Smaller Latin American markets were dragged down by the sell-off - and
because of domestic factors. Lima's general index skidded 3.9% to 1548.22
points. Colombia's IBB index slipped 0.5% to 1071.36.

-By Michelle Wallin and Carol Remond in New York, Mary Milliken in Sao Paulo,
Monica Gutschi in Mexico City, Camilla Gallagher in Buenos Aires, Daniel Flynn
in Caracas and Felipe Ossa in Santiago.




To: Jerry A. Laska who wrote (6524)8/11/1998 6:41:00 PM
From: Steve Fancy  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 22640
 
Brazil shrs end at 9-mo low on emerging mkt woes

Reuters, Tuesday, August 11, 1998 at 17:21

SAO PAULO, Aug 11 (Reuters) - Brazilian shares took another
dive on Tuesday, with the key Bovespa index (INDEX:$BVSP.X) closing at
its lowest level since November 14 after investors dumped
shares on concerns Asia's economic troubles may infect Brazil.
The Bovespa, which groups the 58 most actively traded
shares, ended down 4.14 percent at 8,802 points -- a level not
seen since the thick of the Asian market tumult last fall. The
index was down for an eighth straight session.
"The fall is just too much," said one trader at Doria &
Atherino brokerage. "But nobody can tell when it will recover,"
he added.
The Bovespa was down 13.6 percent so far this year.
Brokers said that liquidity on Latin America's largest
bourse was waning, even though Wednesday marked the expiration
of Bovespa index futures. Trading usually jumps prior to the
expiration.
On Tuesday, shares worth 602 million reais ($518 million)
changed hands. Meanwhile in the futures' market, less than 500
contracts were rolled over to the new contracts, one trader
said. That compares with about 35,000 contracts on Monday.
Market benchmark Telebras preferred (SAO:TELB4) plunged 4.75
percent to 114.30 reais.
Brokers attributed the slump in Brazilian shares to
concerns that economic troubles besetting Japan and other Asian
markets may have a contagion effect on the other side of the
Pacific.
"The fall in the yen is the most worrying factor, since it
rattles other emerging markets and the Dow Jones, but the fall
in Russian shares is obviously another nerve-wracking element,"
said one local trader.
Russian shares closed down 9.11 percent on Tuesday. Its
leading RTS1-Interfax, at 109.90, was at its lowest level since
May 1996.
Among other Brazilian blue chips, Petrobras preferred
(SAO:PETR4) ended down 1.49 percent at 199 reais, while
Eletrobras preferred B (SAO:ELET6) closed down 3.81 percent at
30.30 reais, while Vale do Rio Doce preferred (SAO:VALE5)
plummeted 7.21 percent at 19.30 reais.
Brazil's real took a quick dive early on, but managed to
end up a slight 0.01 percent at 1.16881 reais against the
dollar after reported intervention by a federal bank on behalf
of the Central Bank.
noriko.yamaguchi@reuters.com))

Copyright 1998, Reuters News Service



To: Jerry A. Laska who wrote (6524)8/11/1998 6:48:00 PM
From: Steve Fancy  Respond to of 22640
 
Brazil equity slump not affecting real-ministry

Reuters, Tuesday, August 11, 1998 at 12:22

BRASILIA, Aug 11 (Reuters) - A slump in Brazilian share
prices has not affected the real currency, a spokesman for the
Finance Ministry said Tuesday.
"For the time being this is an equities phenomenon. It has
not had any affect on the currency, which is what is most
important," the spokesman said.




To: Jerry A. Laska who wrote (6524)8/11/1998 6:50:00 PM
From: Steve Fancy  Respond to of 22640
 
TABLE-Brazil's Telesp Celular (SAO:TSPC3) H1 results

Reuters, Tuesday, August 11, 1998 at 13:00

SAO PAULO, Aug 11 (Reuters) - Telesp Celular, the Brazilian
cellular phone company serving Sao Paulo state, released the
following financial results on Tuesday.
1998 H1 1997 H1
Net profit 214.1 mln N/A
Shr net 0.00176 reais N/A
Net worth 1.318 bln N/A
NOTE: All figures are in Brazilian reais. Comparative
figures for the same period in the previous year were not
immediately available.

Copyright 1998, Reuters News Service