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


To: Steve Fancy who wrote (8202)9/16/1998 6:54:00 PM
From: Tundra  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 22640
 
Steve,

I have been a lurker for some time now and wish to extend my
appreciation to you for providing a wealth of information. I am neither
short nor long Telebras but rather view it as some sign of the strength
/weakness of Brazil and consequently of interest to my domestic investment decisions.
. Congratulations on the recent rebound.

I am sure the next few weeks will be interesting.



To: Steve Fancy who wrote (8202)9/16/1998 10:38:00 PM
From: Steve Fancy  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 22640
 
Latam stock analysts see bargains, long-term value

Reuters, Wednesday, September 16, 1998 at 17:19

By Daniel Bases
NEW YORK, Sept 16 (Reuters) - Latin American equity
analysts said on Wednesday they believed stocks throughout the
region represented some of their best values in years for
long-term investors who did not expect prices to rebound all at
once.
Panelists expressed a common theme that Latam stocks at
current prices were bargains, with long-term value seen across
a broad range of industries including retailing, banks, steel
and paper, telecommunications, mining, beverages, electrical
utilities and oil and gas. They spoke to investors gathered at
the Council of the Americas in New York.
"If you've got a long-term horizon for the region, then
stocks in my sector don't come any cheaper," said Rowe Michels,
a Latin American electric utility analyst with Bear Stearns who
added that stocks were currently trading at levels not seen
since 1994-95.
The Asian banking crisis, particularly in Japan, was not
expected to have as severe an effect on the Latam banks because
they learned their lesson in 1994, when Mexico was forced to
devalue its currency, said one analyst.
"Since 1994, we had a period of self-prudence. There isn't
an asset bubble and there wasn't sloppy lending," said Daniel
Abut, senior analyst for Latin American banks at Goldman, Sachs
& Co.
"In the banking sector, Latin America has a lot of foreign
involvement and that helps, unlike Japan," which still doesn't
have direct foreign involvement, Abut noted.
However, Abut cautioned that Latin American banks could
lose capital quickly if there was a devaluation and that if
capital inflows remained low and interest rates remained high,
the growth of the sector is going to be low.
Abut conceded that "1999 may be lackluster for growth, but
for a long-term look, there is such enormous room for growth
going forward."
Lehman Brothers Latam retail analyst Alberto Montagne sang
that sector's praises, saying consolidation was helping to spur
Latin American retail growth.
"It's a fragmented marketplace," Montagne said, pointing
out the decline in market share of independent retailers and
the growth of large chain stores as evidence of heavy merger
activity.
Montagne recommended Mexico's Cifra (MEX:CIF.V) with a buy
rating, saying the company can weather an economic downturn
because it has $600 million in cash and zero debt. However, he
warned the company's expansion plans might be delayed.
Montagne also said consumers have so far avoided the pain
associated with the market's sell-off.
"The problems are not being seen yet in the supermarket and
department store retailers," Montagne said, adding that in a
recent trip to Chile, the stores were full of customers.
In the telecommunications sector, CS First Boston analyst
Ilana Treston, said the industry was entering a kind of
"mid-life crisis where the focus has to shift from wire-line
growth to traffic and data."
In 1990 through 1997, Latin American telecommunications
companies enjoyed monopolies that led to fat profits; pro-local
regulators that promoted infrastructure growth; under-served
residential and business markets to fuel growth; and foreign
investors to help finance that growth, Treston said.
But now, the markets are maturing with increasingly
competitive oligopolies in the private sector, pricing trends
that are shifting downward and financing tight with debt
burdens high relative to the unstable financial markets.
For Brazil's Telebras (SAO:TELB4) (NYSE:TBR), one of the most
liquid and visible of the Latam companies, Treston painted a
cautious picture.
"In Brazil there is a culture of nonpayment among consumers
and no mechanism to collect, an underserved market such as Sao
Paulo can't get more lines fast enough because of the tight
regulation," she said.
Treston believed the data market would drive Latam telco
growth, increasing capacity on existing lines with the wireless
market eventually taking over voice traffic.
As for Telebras, Treston said the company had low U.S.
dollar denominated debt, but not as much capital available as
other comparable companies, such as Mexico's Telefonos de
Mexico (MEX:TMX.L) (NYSE:TMX).
Given the regulatory and economic environment in Brazil,
Treston says, "give me Telmex over Telebras any day."

Copyright 1998, Reuters News Service



To: Steve Fancy who wrote (8202)9/16/1998 10:42:00 PM
From: Steve Fancy  Respond to of 22640
 
Latam stocks extend rally amid talk of int'l aid

Reuters, Wednesday, September 16, 1998 at 18:09

By Noriko Yamaguchi
SAO PAULO, Sept 16 (Reuters) - Major Latin American bourses
extended their rallies on Wednesday amid talk of possible aid
from the world's richest nations and hopes that the head of the
U.S. Federal Reserve would hint of an interest rate cut.
Led by Brazilian blue-chips, stocks across the region were
showing sharp gains in late morning trade as investors cheered
reports that Latin American governments were keeping open a
dialogue with the International Monetary Fund to prevent a
meltdown.
"The probability of a full-fledged crisis may have declined
slightly as the IMF and the G7 are inclined to help in the
event of a need," said Santiago Millan, chief economist at
I.D.E.A. consulting firm in New York, referring to the G7, or
Group of Seven industrialized nations.
Many analysts and traders said a lasting rally may hinge on
whether U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan, in a
speech to Congress Wednesday afternoon, hints that the central
bank may cut interest rates soon.
"That could power things up if it gives a clearer sight
that he's going to cut," said analyst Christopher Ecclestone at
Interacciones brokerage in Buenos Aires.
Greenspan and U.S. Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin are
scheduled to testify before the House of Banking Committee at
1700 GMT on the global economic situation.
In Brazil, the Bovespa index shot up more than 7 percent in
late morning trade, adding to a 18.67 percent rise posted on
Tuesday. The index had dipped more than 2 percent earlier
Wednesday.
Investors also took heart on reports that a recent wave of
dollar outflow from the country was ebbing.
Local foreign exchange markets posted their lowest dollar
outflows in three weeks on Tuesday in a sign that capital
flight was slowing. A net $352 million flew out on Tuesday,
sharply down from a daily average of about $1.5 billion in the
last few weeks. As of Tuesday, dollar outflows had reached
$13.98 billion in September.
Stocks in Argentina were tracking moves in neighboring
Brazil, and the MerVal index jumped more than 2.4 percent
immediately after Brazil's rise. The index had gained 8.9
percent on Tuesday.
In Chile, market players were also bracing for Greenspan's
speech after the IPSA index of leading 40 shares jumped 8.73
percent on Tuesday. The index was up 1.5 percent in morning
trade.
If Greenspan sidesteps the interest rate issue, local
stocks are likely to fall, with investors likely to take
profits on Tuesday's gains, traders said.
Shares in Venezuela were up 3 percent in early trade while
markets in Mexico were closed due to the Independence Day
holiday after closing up 12.9 percent on Tuesday.

Copyright 1998, Reuters News Service



To: Steve Fancy who wrote (8202)9/16/1998 10:44:00 PM
From: Steve Fancy  Respond to of 22640
 
Brazil shares end down 2 pct after sharp swings

Reuters, Wednesday, September 16, 1998 at 18:09

SAO PAULO, Sept 16 (Reuters) - Brazilian shares closed in
negative territory after a volatile session Wednesday that saw
steep gains turn into sharp losses when remarks by U.S. Federal
Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan disappointed Wall Street.
Even though stocks turned lower near the close, traders
said there was no sign that investor confidence was folding
anew, after accumulated gains over the past few sessions
reversed the harrowing plunge of the last two weeks.
The Bovespa (INDEX:$BVSP.X) index of 57 leading shares was down 2.1
percent at 6759 points at the official close. Turnover was at
the heaviest in two weeks at 961 million reais.
After Tuesday's 18 percent jump, investors who were
oversold were tempering the recovery, traders said. Many were
short positions after weeks of dumping Brazilian stocks amid
fears that Russia's financial crisis would sweep into other
emerging markets.
"There are a lot of people who are short in the market and
making an effort so it doesn't change so much," one trader
said. "There was profit-taking after Greenspan's comments."
Shares had shot up nearly 8 percent by midday Wednesday
with investors growing more confident about efforts to ease the
global financial crisis.
Greenspan dashed that new-found optimism by telling the U.S.
Congress that there were no coordinated interest rate cuts in
the works among industrialized nations.
Earlier Wednesday and on Tuesday, traders said the index was
lifted by reports that Brazil and other Latin American nations
were in talks with international agencies on possible bailout
plans. On Tuesday, the Bovespa closed with a three-year record
percentage gain and a record high number of trades.
Brazilian officials have confirmed that conversations are
being held, but have stressed that they are looking at crisis
prevention rather than financial rescue.
The market benchmark, telecommunications company Telebras
(SAO:TELB4), had a strong showing early on because of the talks
but ended flat at 84.50 reais.
The other heavyweight shares closed lower, with Petrobras
(SAO:PETR4) preferred down 9.99 percent at 135 reais and Vale do
Rio Doce (SAO:VALE5) off 9.52 percent at 19 reais.
Eletrobras (SAO:ELET6) fell 6.78 percent to 26 reais.

Copyright 1998, Reuters News Service



To: Steve Fancy who wrote (8202)9/16/1998 10:44:00 PM
From: Steve Fancy  Respond to of 22640
 
Brazil fiscal commission proposes new fiscal

Reuters, Wednesday, September 16, 1998 at 18:40

The savings would be sliced off the 2.3 billion reais which
the federal government had planned to spend to honor existing
loan agreements with local governments by the end of the year,
representing a 40 percent saving.
A further 600 million reais would come from a total of 2.1
billion reais the federal government planned to lend to states
and municipalities in 1999, Finance Ministry Executive
Secretary Pedro Parente said.
The Commission for Fiscal Management Control (CCF), meeting
for the first time Wednesday, said it also proposed including
foreign loans from organizations such as the World Bank in
Brazil's federal government budget accounts.

Copyright 1998, Reuters News Service



To: Steve Fancy who wrote (8202)9/16/1998 10:46:00 PM
From: Steve Fancy  Respond to of 22640
 
Brazil's VBC only bidder for utility privatization

Reuters, Wednesday, September 16, 1998 at 19:18

SAO PAULO, Sept 16 (Reuters) - Brazil's VBC energy
consortium was the only group to present a financial deposit
for the sale of Sao Paulo state energy distributor, a spokesman
for the Bovespa stock exchange said Wednesday.
Sao Paulo plans to put Bandeirante on the auction block for
the second time Thursday after the utility failed to elicit a
single bid in April when the state first tried to sell it.
The state is asking a minimum 1.01 billion reais ($859
million) for a 50 percent stake in Brazil's fourth-biggest
electricity distributing company. Bandeirante serves some two
million customers in Sao Paulo's industrial interior.
Brazil's National Development Bank has offered to finance
50 percent of the minimum price, facilitating the purchase for
VBC, which will face steep interest rates in foreign markets.
VBC is a joint venture uniting Banco Bradesco (SAO:BBDC4)
and industrial groups Votorantim and Camargo Correa. It will be
represented by brokers Boavista, the Bovespa spokesman said.

Copyright 1998, Reuters News Service



To: Steve Fancy who wrote (8202)9/16/1998 10:47:00 PM
From: Steve Fancy  Respond to of 22640
 
Brazil struggles to keep cool amid crisis

Reuters, Wednesday, September 16, 1998 at 19:46

BRASILIA, Sept 16 (Reuters) - Brazilian government
officials, struggling to cope with a raging economic crisis,
face another challenge -- keeping their cool amid one of the
harshest dry seasons on record.
Thermometers in the capital Brasilia topped 92 degrees
Fahrenheit (33.3 degrees Celsius) on Wednesday, the highest
temperature so far this year, after air humidity plunged to
just 12 percent on Tuesday, the second-lowest on record.
"People are getting very bad tempered and sleepy," said a
spokesman for the local Federal District government. "Schools
have been advised to cancel physical exercise classes."
Residents have been complaining of headaches and
respiratory problems as Brasilia is gripped by drought.
Vegetation in Brasilia has shriveled up and forest fires on
the outskirts of town have sent a thick haze of smoke into the
sky, virtually blocking out the sun on some days.
This year's dry season has been harsher than usual. Air
humidity has plunged to its lowest level since September 1994,
when it fell to an all-time low of 11 percent.
"It's been 100 days since it last rained," said Francisco
Quixaba, a weather forecaster at the National Institute of
Meteorology (INMET).

Copyright 1998, Reuters News Service



To: Steve Fancy who wrote (8202)9/16/1998 10:51:00 PM
From: Steve Fancy  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 22640
 
Brazil Alters Compulsory Deposit Rules
Due To Rate Hike

Dow Jones Newswires

BRASILIA -- Rules regulating the compulsory Central Bank deposits
which financial institutions have to make on long-term investments they
receive, have been adjusted following last week's interest rate hike, the
Central bank announced Wednesday.

As reported, last Thursday the Monetary Policy Committee raised the
Tban, the current rate at which the monetary authority lends money to
banks, to 49.75% from 29.75% in response to the massive outflow of
dollars since the beginning of September.

Before, these compulsory deposits were remunerated by the Central Bank
using the TBC, or basic interest rate, currently at 19%.

But following the Central Bank decision earlier this month to only apply the
Tban ceiling rate for loans to the financial system, these compulsory
deposits will now be remunerated on basis of the Special System for
Settlement and Custody, known as SELIC, or "overnight" rate.

Fines for not complying with the compulsory deposits will now be
calculated at the Tban rate plus 12%, as against the TBC rate plus 18%
before, if the institution's banking reserves are in the black.

In case of an overdraft in its reserves, the fines applied will be the Tban
rate plus 18%, instead of TBC plus 27% before, the Central Bank said.

-By William Vanvolsem; (5561) 2443095; wvanvolsem@ap.org

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