What is strong is the looting by Teodoro Petkoff in Tal Cual

April 9, 2008

I must say that when the Electricidad de Caracas bond was sold in what was clearly a blatant corruption scam, I was appalled that a US$ 100 million scam could go unnoticed like that. In some sense it is part of the climate of fear created by Chavez and his hoodlums in which many segments of the media are afraid to speak up for fear of retaliation. But I have been extremely happy to see others reporting the case. From Reuters, to Reporte Diario de La Economia to Ana Julia Jatar, the story is coming out and even though I do not expect this amoral Government to investigate anything, the record is there for all to see.

Today, Teodoro Petkoff covered the issue and it was clear that he had all of the data. But I would like to note one part of his Editorial that may go unnoticed: There is no reason for the Government to create this second part of the foreign exchange market using bonds other than to insure that some people will make so much money just in case Chavez disappears from the Venezuelan political scene anytime soon. Thus, if we saw corruption before, you ain’t thing anything yet! It is also interesting that Petkoff uses names, naming a person that had been acting in the structured note market/scam and now magically appears as an adviser to the Minister of Finance on these matters.

I wonder now where all of the cheerleaders of Chavismo are. They used to come and say so and so was corrupt and now that Venezuela has the most corrupt, unethical and immoral Government in its history they are quiet but still supporting what may be the most aberrant and corrupt Government in the country’s history.

And as Petkoff suggests, either Hugo Chavez knows exactly what is going on or he is an bumbling and incompetent fool. And by now, it is not the latter…

What is strong is the looting by
Teodoro Petkoff in Tal Cual

The looting of the country is
frankly reaching apocalyptic levels. What happened with the Electricidad de
Caracas bonds reaches new levels on matters of illegal enrichment. The
operation is as follows: Electricidad de Caracas, now in the hands of the
State, announces the issuing of a public debt bond. Amount: 650 million
dollars, ten years maturity and with interest of 8.5%. The buyer will acquire
them with a premium at a price of 105%, that is, for each one thousand dollars
in face value he will pay 1,050. While denominated in dollars the bond will be
paid in Bolivars at the official exchange rate of Bs. F. 2.15 per dollar. Up to
here the procedure follows that steps in the placements of other securities
which insure dollars at the official rate of exchange, later sold in the parallel
market and the profit is split between those that distribute it and those that
share it. But in the case of the electrical bonds, the buyer will have to
forcefully sell his bonds to an unidentified buyer, who will pay in dollars.
The repurchase price fluctuates between Bs.F. 3.42 per dollar to bs. F. 3.6 per
dollar, because the “repurchase “ price is with a discount at 62.7% and 66%.
That is, for each one thousand dollars of the bond the holder will receive 627
or 660 dollars, according to the discount.

But here is where the “kikirigüiki”*
is, the average price of the Venezuelan bonds in the secondary market is of 83%
over its face value. Thus the repurchasers, still anonymous but we can presume
who they are, will make between 170 and 200 dollars for each 1,000 of the bonds
“repurchased” with the discounts mentioned earlier.

You bought at 62 or 66 and you
sold at 83. The full issue (650 million dollars) would produce “earnings”
between 110 and 132 million dollars.

Is this what they nationalized Electricidad
de Caracas for? To transform it into a “corporate agent” of thefts to the
Nation and enrichment of the Government officials and financial operators of
the regimen? We are no longer going to ask if the President knows about this or
if this is being done behind his back. Because it is not only impossible that
he does not know of the enormous frauds that are talking place with the
placement of public debt bonds, but we can presume that having been convinced
by Moris Beracha that the mechanism to be sued to get rid of, without leaving a
trace, the structured notes, which incurred in a patrimonial loss to the nation
over US$ 3 billion, he is taking his time to personally monitor the development
of the operations.

And we have yet to establish a dual exchange rate. When that happens, the orgy
of corruption that will fall upon us will leave as only chicken thieves the famous
operators of Recadi. The moral decomposition of this regime is touching bottom,
the bottom of the pan that they are scraping given the perspective that Chavez
has an expiration date.

*kikiriguiki, slang for shenanigan


Planning in the revolution

April 9, 2008

Ramon Carrizales, Vice-president of Venezuela April 9th. 2008: “The nationalization of steel company SIDOR is not in the plans of the State”

Ramón Carrizales, April 10th. 2008, less than 24 hours later: “Venezuela will renationalize steel company SIDOR”

This is what is called long term planning under the revolution


Chavez shows off new cement technology

April 9, 2008

Chavez showing off the new technology he invented that he will use to improve the productivity of the Cemex, Holcim and Lafarge plants. He claims not only will the plants be more productive, but he will be able to give jobs to all men in Venezuela and about one third of those in Colombia to move around with this hi tech system 8 million Tons of cement a year. He may be right…


The almost next to last look at the cement nationalization story

April 8, 2008

I thought I had cemented the whole issue of the nationalization of the
cement industry, but the level of improvisation and ignorance is so
high that I have to revisit the issue maybe for the last time.

First, as I mentioned in the earlier post, President Chavez said
yesterday that he was only going to nationalize those cement companies
that used to be owned by the Government and were privatized. Except
that oops, that leeaves no company to be nationalized, as none of the
three companies in foreign hands was ever owned by the Government. The
only company that was ever in Government hands was Cementos
Andinos, which was nationalized last year. So, Government officials had
to backtrack a little today, without clarifying that Chavez never knew
what he was talking about,

Then, the President’s ignorance was matched by that of the Minister of
Energy and Mines and the man now in charge of food, oil, cement and
what have you, Rafael Ramirez. Ramirez said that the Government would
like to have a “minimum” of 60% of the cement companies, which is as
nonsensical as they come.

First of all, I doubt that any of the foreign companies that control
these cement companies in Venezuela would like to remain as partners
with a Government with little experience with the cement industry, but
Ramirez seems to ignore a small part of the equation: The Law, in this
case the Capital Markets Law.

You see, in order to protect minority shareholders, the Venezuelan
Capital Markets Law establishes that the entity trying to take control
of a public company, in this case the Government, has to tender for 100%
of the shares of the company. Thus, it is not up to Ramirez, Chavez or
the Government to decided they want a minimum of 60% or not, they have
to tender for all the shares and the people will decide whether they
hand them over or not, you can’t force them.If only 52% tender, tough luck, it’s the law.

But of course, nobody wants to be partners with companies of a “social”
nature, managed by an incompetent Government and Cemex and Lafarge (the owners of the two public companies)
are likely to tender their 80%+ stakes in their companies and most other
minority shareholders are likely to do the same.

The problem is that Rafael Ramirez in his ignorance wants to make
grandiose nationalistic statements that collide with Venezuelan
legislation, but he does not now better, he just has a limited
experience with PDVSA and his failed policies of the last years. So,
you can’t ask for much more.

Al of these statements are so confusing and contradictory, that in any
other country if the Government were a private company, it would be
fined by regulatory authorities for misleading and confusing statements
that hinder the ability of investors to make rational decisions and may
have induced some to lose money in the process.

But ignorance rules in Venezuela since 1998 and such matters, as the
rights of investors or citizens for that matter are simply irrelevant.

The revolution is above it all, including knowledge and people’s rights.


Santos sends a bunch of pictures, evne of people!!!

April 7, 2008

Santos sends pictures of species, hybrids and even of la Gran Sabana and even people!!!

Two pictures of what Santos considers to be his best Cattleya Lueddemanniana

Left: Cattleya Lueddemanianna Coerulea, Right Cattelya Lawrenceana concolor Diana, both Venezuelan

Cattleya :oddigessi color on the left and alba on the right

Pescatorea Dayana, a Colombian species

Pescatorea Dayana on the left, Rincholaelia Digbiana on the right

Vanda on the left, orange hybrid on the right.

Quebrada Jaspe (Jade Brook) in Gran Sabana on the left and Eriopsis Biloba in situ in the Gran Saban

On the left Santos’ family in the Aponguao. Epidendrum in the Gran Sabana, in situ


April 7, 2008

—Minister
of Planning El Troudi  said
today
that the slower inflation in March is a result of the Government’s
inflation policies, saying the Government’s economic policies “shield” us from
international inflation.

This
is what I call high quality BS or BS of the highest quality. Under the “old” inflation
index used for 50 years,
inflation in the month of March went actually up
from 2.38% to 2.5% in
March, but under the new and improved INPC, there was a drop from 2.1% to 1.7%,
which still is a high inflation rate of 22.7% and well ABOVE the inflation of
all Latin American countries. In fact, I would not be surprised if it is double
that rate,

—Recently
the PDVAL supermarkets, the new chain of supermarkets created by PDVSA,
introduced its own brand of rice, oil and black beans under the brand name
“Sabana”.

It
had to be done, when it was discovered that the packages of those particular
products carried the “brand name” Made in the USA. These products were actually
imported from the Evil Empire by PDVSA and everything was repackaged so that
the “people” did not get nauseated.

—Yesterday,
the
President said
that he would only nationalize those cement companies that
had originally been privatized and used to be owned by the Government, leading
many to believe that Cemex, Fabrica Nacional de Cementos and Consolidada de
Cementos would escape nationalization.

It turns
out that these companies had been owned by the Government only in Chavez’ mind.
The only company that was at one time Government owned and then private was Cementos
Andinos, which was nationalized last year. The other three were created by
Venezuelans and owned by Venezuelans since their inception in the first half of
the XXth. Century. They were sold to Cemex, Lafarge and Holcin by the Mendoza, Delfino
and Boulton families who created them and controlled them. All three were
majority owned by these families and traded at some point in the Caracas Stock
Exchange. Later today, the issue was clarified, as usual Chavez had made it all
up, they will all be nationalized.


April 5, 2008


We have gone from Government by witticism a la Chavez to management by hearsay now. According to Chavez, one of the reasons for nationalizing the cement industry is that cement here is so expensive, that somebody told Chavez that they import it from Europe because it is cheaper. Moreover Chavez says that Venezuelan cement companies export cement to make more money.



Both statements are not only false, but reveal an incredible ignorance about cement and the Venezuelan cement industry. But nobody around him dares tell Chavez how wrong he is.


To begin with, Venezuela imports no relevant amount of cement. Maybe some sacks or trucks get across the border with Colombia, but the amount is basically negligible compared to what Venezuela produces, uses and exports. So, if Chavez actually believed this person, the decision is based on a lie, as simple as that, and demonstrates the level of ignorance being used in making such important decisions.


The world cement industry has become incredibly efficient as essentially three companies, the same ones that are present in Venezuela, compete with each other. They are Lafarge, Holcin and Cemex. All of them have plants all over the place, which allow them to shift cement as it is needed in different parts of the world. Essentially, what these companies have done is smooth out economic cycles by having plants that can shift their sales geographically as needs change.


In fact, that is precisely what did in the Venezuelan cement industry, forcing the owners to sell. The industry used to be owned by Venezuelans who concentrated their business here. When there was a downturn here, they could shift part of their exports abroad, but international competition was tough and they did not have the muscle or economies of scales to compete. During the downturn, plants would not operate at capacity because they were able to export only part of their excess capacity.  That (and some bad management)is how the Vencemos plant, for example, ended in the hands of Cemex, in one of those cycles the company went almost belly up, the owners sold a piece to Cemex with an option in the future to get back part of their shares and they lost the whole thing.


The problem is that transportation is a huge part of the cost of cement. Companies in Venezuela exert regional influence essentially using price. Cemex, for example, has a huge plant in Pertigalete right on the water, which allows it to send cement by sea to the coast of Venezuela, dominating that region. Other companies have plants in various regions, but essentially each plant has to supply its own region, it can’t compete outside the region because transportation costs kill you. (Anyone that has ever tried to lift a sack of Portland cement should understand well what I am talking about)


The beauty of the Pertigalete plant in Anzoátegui is that the mine is right on the water and there is a deep port there. Thus, not only can Cemex dominate the coastal region, but when local consumption drops, it can just export the cement by sea to its other markets in the region. In fact, most people do not even know that Cemex Venezuela comprises cement plants in Venezuela, Panama and the Dominican Republic, allowing the company to dominate the Caribbean region.


While Chavez charges that the cement companies “export” the cement and that is why he can’t build houses that is also a lie. Most of the cement produced in Venezuela has been used locally and it was only in the years with few construction projects that cement was exported. For example, last year, Venezuela produced 7.53 million Tons of cement, of which only 729,000 Tons were exported. The previous year the country produced more 7.7 million Tons, of which 2 million Tons were exported, basically because there was no demand here. Production went down last year 150,000 Tons for the simple reason that the construction market cooled off elsewhere and there were no international buyers. Plants simply produced less.


Thus, knowledge is not being used to make decisions in this country, which is costing us a lot of money. We now have a new decision making tool: Management by hearsay.


It was also hearsay that drove Chavez to buy a dairy company recently. Someone told him the company had 37% of the milk production market, so he ordered his underlings to buy it at any price, despite the fact the company only produces 10% of the milk in the country. None of his yes men has been capable of telling him the truth and we see ads claiming the Government will certainly increase the 37% to 60% soon just to please the autocrat. Amazing!


Thus, Venezuela will spend US$ 2-2.5 billion to buy perfectly working cement plants, which are run efficiently, rather than spending it on hospitals, infrastructure and the like. These companies will supply the country with cement, but as downturns come and go, it will be unable to compete with the monsters we are buying the companies from and the operations will lose money. Additionally, as the companies are run with a “social” purpose in mind, they will become inefficient, there will be little technological investment and maintenance and the companies will certainly go in the hole. We have already seen that in CANTV and Electricidad de Caracas and it has not been even a year since they were taken over by Chavez.  (The recent EDC bond, for example, was issued in such a way that it was costly for the company and was made up simply to make some people very rich)


So, we will tag alone and unfortunately this governing by hearsay will one day explode all at once when there is no money to run any of these projects. Nothing new in this, Carlos Andres Perez did it in the 70’s with disastrous results. When oil prices dropped in the early 80’s the currency crashed and there was no money for the people, as the companies had to be kept running.


Of course, Chavez, whether in or out of Government at that time, will say he left it all functioning well and it is the Empire that is behind the whole thing. And the cheerleaders of the revolution will still believe it.


It is almost hopeless.


Hugo Chavez nationalizes Venezuela’s cement industry…at any cost

April 3, 2008

Hugo Chavez just nationalized Venezuela’s cement industry, he asked the companies to “send him the bill” or something like that. “Let it cost, what it may cost”. Chavez said.

I guess he just felt like it, it’s called Government by witticism..God help this poor country…

(Thanks Daniel!)


A correction, a concern and a challenge…

April 3, 2008


Correction:
I did
make a mistake last night. The “profit” from the sale of the bond is not US$
131.95 million, but “only” US$ 107.9 million, I used the full face value of the
bond, US$ 650 million, rather than the value they sell it for 20% of 83% x 650
million. The numbers changed by today, as they were not able to place it all,
so that the profit went down to around US$ 101 million. I am not sure they were
able to place it this way; I had to change gears to something else. Thanks to
RP for asking the right question and making me realize my mistake.

Concern: While
I try to limit my blog to Venezuelan affairs, I can’t help but see ourselves in
the mirror of what is happening in Zimbabwe, where
opposition offices have been raided by Mugabe’s police
and at least two
journalists have been detained, including the reporter for the New York Times.
The reporter is being held for violating the “journalism” law and it looks like
the opposition victory may not be recognized. Another sad day in Zimbabwe due
to the actions of Robert Mugabe who our own President has called his “friend”.
Will the Venezuelan Government stand up for democracy in Zimbabwe?

Challenge:
The Venezuelan Ambassador to the US “warned”
that country of the consequences of classifying Venezuela as a terrorist
country based on the evidence of the Reyes computer. The warning came in the
form of the commercial consequences such as loss of jobs, oil and exports for
the US. Jeez, how unrevolutionary from Ambassador Alvarez who represents a
Government for whom ideology and their so called “principles” are certainly more important than dirty capitalistic concepts such as commerce and the like. In fact, wouldn’t an embargo accelerate the revolutionary “endogenous” development of the country?

But I
wonder who will suffer more and challenge the Ambassador to tell us who will lose more: The US with less oil, fewer jobs and less commerce
or the Venezuelans and their Government when we can no longer export oil to the
US, all visas will be void, all accounts of financial institution will be
closed, CITGO may be seized, Alvarez will be expelled, US companies will have
to leave Venezuela and Government officials will be tried for terrorism in the
US and The Hague.

Just a thought…


When the EDC rumor becomes reality, but much worse…robolutionary financial creativity at its best (or worst)

April 2, 2008


I must apologize. Last night, in discussing Rumor #3 about
a possible bond issue by Electricidad de Caracas, I suggested in very naïve
fashion, that it was Fonden that was buying the EDC bonds from the clients that
were being offered the bonds with automatic buyback.

As usual, I underestimated the creativity of the
revolution by about US$ 130 million. Instead, I presented a scenario, which
while still nonsensical, had some redeeming value for the country. Yje reality is that there is no reddeming qualities to this new financial rip-off

Because it turns out, the true and real scenario probably
represents a clear rip off and remarkably, people are mad and many have refused
to participate in it.

Essentially, the deal works like this:

A local broker, not a very well known one that recently
changed hands, is in charge of the operation: To place US$ 650 million in an
Electricidad de Caracas bond, maturing in 2018 and with a coupon (annual
payment in two parts) of 8.5%. The placement is “private” highly unusual for a
Government entity. Recall Electricidad de Caracas is now owned by PDVSA.
Private means that there are no ads in the papers, nothing of the
much-ballyhooed “democratization of capital”. Just friends and family. (Recall EDC disappears as a legal entity in May 2010, so that it makes little sense to issue a bond beyond its demise, moreover the company is buying back its previous bond at an outrageously high price)

The bond was “announced” on March 28th. even if
nobody was there to hear the trees fall in the forest. The Bloomberg system
created it and the sole dealer of the issue was Dutch bank ABN AMRO, who I
think is owned by Barclays these days.

So, let’s use an example since many people were lost with
my story last night:

You are offered $1,000 of an Electricidad de Caracas bond
maturing in 2018 at a price of 105%, but at the official rate of exchange. This
means you would pay:

1.05*2.15*1,000=2,257.5 new Bolivars for US$ 1000

BUT, and this is a huge BUT, you are not allowed to keep
the bond. They repurchase it from you in exchange for dollars at a price of
62.7% (Reuters below says 66%, I heard only 62.7%)

So in exchange for your 2,257.5 Bs. You get 0.627×1000=
627 dollars, so you purchased each dollar for Bs. 3,600 plus the transaction
tax, below the parallel swap exchange rate. That is YOUR profit, if you were
lucky or unlucky enough to be offered the bonds.

But something is not altogether right. You see, last night
I assumed Fonden was buying back the bonds for its portfolio, but I did not have the details of the
bonds. With a 8.5% coupon and a maturity in 2018, a price of 62.7% gives you a
yield to maturity of the bond, i.e. the effective yield you will have if you
keep it until 2018, of 16.3%, obviously too high for what Venezuelan bonds
yield these days.

How do I know Fonden or somebody else is not keeping them? Easy, brokers in
New York are buying the bonds at 83%. Thus, whomever is buying them “forcedfully”
from you is turning around and selling them at 83%. This makes sense; the yield
to maturity is the bond at 83% is 11.3%, much like the yield of the PDVSA 2017
bond yesterday. That is a true market yield and price.

What this means is that someone is making a lot of money
in the deal.

How much?

Well, you can calculate it in Bs. (They are buying dollars
at Bs. 2.7 per US$). But since their trade is in dollars it is very easy to
calculate: They buy at 62.7% and sell at 83% for a 20.3% difference.

Since the size of the bond is US$ 650 million, the profit
is a cool US$ 131.95 million. (20.3% of 650 million)

No wonder it is “private”, someone really wants to keep
the profits! Who? It is anybody’s guess, but it is a PDVSA owned company, which
issued the bond and chose who, how and what to give to whom. The rest I leave
to your imagination.

But a funny thing happened on the way to the profits…many
banks, brokers have refused to participate. They don’t like the deal, they
don’t like how it is being done and they don’t like that you have to pay a
small broker with no credit rating and that is who you have to pay before you
get your dollars.

Thus, as of last night, someone told me that the issue was
not being successfully placed, despite the possible profits.

The whole thing is just too clumsy and badly done, but
what do you expect?

Just so you don’t think I am the only one mad at this or that knows about it,
Reuters wrote about the EDC issue and clearly they were sufficiently bothered
by the whole thing. (Some of the numbers are different, but they only change
things by a little bit). Here is a translation of the Reuters report:

CARACAS, April 2 (Reuters) – A subsidiary of the Venezuelan
state-owned company La Electricidad de Caracas launched an issue of $ 650
million in debt notes maturing on 2018, operators said on Wednesday, which
questioned the placement scheme, since it is being made by direct award.

    
The bonds of Electricidad de Caracas Finance BV have a fixed coupon rate
of 8.50 percent and a price of 105 percent, said the sources who explained that
investors pay on Thursday, in bolivars, for their orders.

    
This type of operation allows companies and individuals to buy dollars,
in the midst of exchange controls imposed in 2003, but at a rate higher than
the official 2.15 bolivars to the dollar, in a scheme that the government has
used before to drain liquidity and try to mitigate inflationary pressures.

     It
was impossible to confirm the transaction with the company, whose owner is the
state Petroleos de Venezuela (PDVSA) since it was nationalized last year.

    
However, the issue was “announced” on March 28 under the identification
code (ISIN) XS0356521160 but not publicized for the local market.

    
The placement of La Electricidad de Caracas <EDC.CR> was coordinated
by the Dutch bank ABN AMRO and, as operators, was conducted by the local
brokerage Unovalores. However, it was not possible to obtain a statement from
the brokerage company.

    
“There are some notes of La Electricidad de Caracas maturing in 2018
and have a coupon of 8.50 percent (…) The strange thing is that they will
never deliver papers, but are going to buy it back at 66 percent, “said
one trader.

     He
added that the issue guarantees, at this price, an implicit rate for one dollar
of 3.69 bolivars. However, another operator estimated it at nearly 2.8 bolivars
to the dollar, computing a value for an 84 per cent in the secondary market,
the 3 percent commissions and fees.