Titoli di Stato paesi-emergenti VENEZUELA e Petroleos de Venezuela - Cap. 1 (15 lettori)

probabilità recovery

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    Votes: 21 48,8%
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darkog

In Hoc Signo Vince..
Non parliamo della lira turca ,io resto dentro spero di essere abbastanza giovane per almeno ritornare in pari un giorno:wall:

io invecchio al ritmo della perdita sul cambio, l'artrite avrà presto il sopravvento sulle mie già di per sè limitate capacità

In effetti ho dato un'occhiata ai grafici...va bé fortuna che ne ho poche ,poi i cedoloni suppliscono un po'

su try avevo un cip piccolo piccolo della BEI 2018 a 2,74 e sono uscito con una perdita ancora sostenibile a 2,79 convinto che non ci avevo proprio preso...

tengo botta sul venezuela '27 in buon gain :up:

Non parlatemi del TRY. Anch'io sto mantenendo le posizioni in gran sofferenza. Ogni volta mi ripeto che era meglio uscire.

Cmq penso finirà questo trend. Mi immagino che l'appiattimento dei rendimenti dei paesi "core" riporti appeal verso le monete "esotiche" con conseguente rivalutazione della valuta e ridimensionamento dei rendimenti.

La Turchia, nello specifico, ha visto negli ultimi sei mesi una forte svalutazione della moneta e un innalzamento importante dei rendimenti.

Io avevo preso tali bond per diversificare una parte di portafoglio nel caso di forti tensioni sull Euro.
 

bia06

Listen other's viewpoint avoid conflicts & wars.
qualche isin in try

puoi postare qualche isin :bow:
Non parlatemi del TRY. Anch'io sto mantenendo le posizioni in gran sofferenza. Ogni volta mi ripeto che era meglio uscire.

Cmq penso finirà questo trend. Mi immagino che l'appiattimento dei rendimenti dei paesi "core" riporti appeal verso le monete "esotiche" con conseguente rivalutazione della valuta e ridimensionamento dei rendimenti.

La Turchia, nello specifico, ha visto negli ultimi sei mesi una forte svalutazione della moneta e un innalzamento importante dei rendimenti.

Io avevo preso tali bond per diversificare una parte di portafoglio nel caso di forti tensioni sull Euro.
 

tommy271

Forumer storico
Desperate to Boost Oil Production, Venezuela Moves to Devalue Currency

By Oilprice.com
December 21, 2013
This article was written by Oilprice.com, the leading provider of energy news in the world.






On December 16, 2013, Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro outlined plans to use a weaker exchange rate in order to lift the prospects of its ailing oil sector and deal with a worsening economic crisis. Venezuela's foreign exchange reserves have depleted to their lowest levels since 2004. The weaker exchange rate allows the government to earn more Bolivars for every barrel of oil sold, which is priced in dollars on the international market.


The measure appears to apply only to oil transactions. The official exchange rate in Venezuela is 6.3 Bolivars per dollar, while the alternative exchange rate used for oil sales hovers near 12 Bolivars per dollar, according to the Wall Street Journal. Unofficially, exchange rates on the black market often mean people pay as much as 60 Bolivars for every dollar.


The de facto currency devaluation comes as the economy continues to deteriorate. Yields on Venezuela's sovereign debt reached 15% in early December. Standard & Poor's and Moody's Investors Service, two credit rating agencies, both downgraded Venezuela's credit rating in mid-December, citing "growing radicalization of the economy."


The battered economy has also pushed President Maduro to consider raising gasoline prices. Heavy government subsidies result in Venezuelans paying some of the lowest prices at the pump in the world – around 5 cents per gallon. Subsidies are not only expensive for the government, but they also discourage efficiency, and higher domestic consumption eats into potential exports. Slashing subsidies will reduce this enormous fiscal burden, which can cost the government around $12.5 billion per year.

However, Maduro is in a bind because raising gasoline prices and devaluing the currency will only exacerbate inflation, already running at around 54% per year. Stoking inflation will squeeze the Venezuelan people further, already reeling from unemployment and shortages of food.


President Maduro has sought to maintain a grip on all powers of government, following in the footsteps of the late Hugo Chavez. On November 19, the Congress passed, and Maduro signed, a law that grants the President power to rule by decree for the next year. He argues the powers are needed to clean out corruption and reduce the harmful influence of capitalist forces. Buoyed by the populist maneuver, Maduro's party won municipal elections on December 8, which has given him enough political capital to pursue risky maneuvers to head off a worsening economic crisis.


The Maduro government is entirely dependent on its flagging oil industry. Venezuela holds the second largest oil reserves in the world at 211 billion barrels. Oil represents 95% of export earnings and about half of budget revenues. Yet Venezuela's oil exports have declined by nearly half since peaking at 3 million barrels per day in 1997. Natural decline of the nation's oil fields is a contributing factor, but the mismanagement of Petróleos de Venezuela (PDVSA), the state-owned oil company, is the greater reason for decline.


AE3023.png


Source: EIA

In late November, Citigroup published a report concluding that Venezuela presents, "probably the biggest bull risk to the oil market in 2014 outside of the MENA [Middle East and north Africa] region." Venezuela is struggling to pay its debts, and the government is pillaging PDVSA's coffers as it searches for cash. Without money to invest in its oil fields, even if Venezuela can avoid a more acute crisis, such as debt default or a coup, its oil output will decline over the long-term.
 
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tommy271

Forumer storico
Venezuela Oil Price Falls


Venezuela's Ministry of Energy and Petroleum reports that the average price of Venezuelan crude sold by Petroleos de Venezuela S.A. (PDVSA) during the week ending December 20 fell for the first time after 5 straight weeks of strength




CARACAS -- Venezuela's weekly oil basket stayed below the country's desired $100 a barrel floor and fell slightly this week.

According to figures released by the Venezuela Ministry of Energy and Petroleum, the average price of Venezuelan crude sold by Petroleos de Venezuela S.A. (PDVSA) during the week ending December 20 was $97.09, down $0.31 from the previous week's $97.40.

WTI in New York averaged $97.57 -- down $0.12 -- for the week, while Brent crude traded in London averaged $109.32 -- down $0.43 from the previous week.

"In a week controlledby news on the reduction of the program to stimulate the US economy, average prices of benchmarks ended downward," the Venezuelan oil ministry said.

According to Venezuelan government figures, the average price in 2013 for Venezuela's mix of heavy and medium crude is now $99.87 for the year to date. In 2012, Venezuela averaged $103.42, higher than 2011's $101.06, 2010's $72.43, and much higher than 2009’s average price of $57.01.

So far in 2013, WTI has averaged $97.94 while Brent has averaged $108.63. Benchmark WTI traded on the NYMEX averaged $94.23 for 2012 while Brent averaged $111.64 for that year. Prior to 2010, Brent and the heavier Venezuelan crude had historically traded below WTI.

Venezuela's basket set its highest weekly average on July 18, 2008, when it hit $126.46 before economies around the world began crashing under the weight of expensive oil and crashing sub-prime debt.

The United States is the largest importer of Venezuela’s oil exports.

According to the US Department of Energy, the US imported 728,000 barrels a day from Venezuela in July and averaged about 731,000 barrels a day for the year through July. In 2012, US oil imports from Venezuela averaged 906,000 barrels a day.

Oil is the main export of Venezuela and provides most of the country's foreign currency. According to Oil Minister and PDVSA head Rafael Ramirez -- who is now also the Economics Vice President -- the state oil company has delivered $34.290 billion to the Central Bank through September. Ramirez estimates that PDVSA will deliver a total $47.312 billion dollars to government coffers by the end of the year -- $1.232 billion more than in 2012.

The Joint Organizations Data Inititiative (JODI), overseen by the Riyadh, Saudi Arabia based International Energy Forum, reports that Venezuela's crude oil exports fell 12% to 1.38 million barrels a day in September.
 

tommy271

Forumer storico
Venezuela’s Maduro Says He Had ‘Long Conversations’ with Fidel





CARACAS – Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro said on Tuesday he had “good and long conversations” with former Cuban president Fidel Castro during his short and unannounced trip to the Caribbean island over the weekend.

“I held good, long meetings with Commander Fidel. We had long conversations as we worked together,” Maduro said on a Christmas TV and radio broadcast from the Miraflores presidential palace.

The Venezuelan president said he arrived “around midday” in Caracas, the Venezuelan capital, from Havana, where he also held a meeting with Raúl Castro, his Cuban counterpart and Fidel’s younger brother.

The Cuban press, which ran photos and videos of the Maduro-Castro meeting in Havana, pointed out both rulers held talks on the countries’ “international and regional agendas.”

Maduro also said that during his short stay in Cuba he welcomed the families of “the five heroes who fought against terrorism, four of which are still kidnapped in prison cells in the ‘Empire’” as he referred to five Cuban citizens apprehended in the U.S. in 1998 and convicted of espionage in 2001.

Maduro, who was accompanied during his trip by his wife, Cilia Flores, praised the Cuban spies for being “antiterrorism fighters” and said he was for certain they all would be “running free” in the streets of Havana and Caracas “sooner rather than later.”

In addition, Communist Party daily Granma reported that Maduro held a meeting with René González on Monday, the single one of them freed from prison so far.

Cuba became Venezuela’s main political and economic ally under the rule of Hugo Chávez, who passed away on March 5 of this year, since 1999. Cuba is currently receiving some 100,000 barrels of oil a day from Venezuela as part of a trade agreement signed by both nations in 2000.

Latin American Herald Tribune - Venezuela’s Maduro Says He Had ‘Long Conversations’ with Fidel

***
Sarebbe più interessante sapere il clima dell'incontro con Raul ... piuttosto che con Fidel.
 

junior63

Forumer storico

Non l'ho capita questa notizia di ticinolive, la svalutazione del 46% è dell' 8 Febbraio 2013, semmai avrebbero potuto pubblicare la notizia che dall'anno prossimo per i venezuelani non sarà più possibile accedere a questo tipo di cambio ma solo a quello del Sicad che attualmente è a 11,3, altro che 46% di svalutazione.

Il 6,30 è solo per i mafiosi al governo che quando va bene importano a quel cambio alimenti e medicine per poi rivenderle con lauti guadagni, quando va male importano medicinali e alimenti scaduti e incassano i $ per poi cambiarli sul mercato nero a 60, però sono comunisti... si capisce dalla camicia rossa... :lol::lol:
 
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