Titoli di Stato paesi-emergenti VENEZUELA e Petroleos de Venezuela - Cap. 1

probabilità recovery

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Represión en los Altos Mirandinos desde la madrugada #17May

May 17, 2017 6:56 am


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Habitantes de los Altos Mirandinos denuncian fuerte represión de la Guardia Nacional Bolivariana durante toda la noche y la madrugada de este miércoles. Se cumplen tres días de protestas y según se informa persisten detonaciones en Montaña Alta, Panamericana, Carrizal, Los Teques y San Diego de los Altos.

“Fuerte represión de la GNB a la altura de Farmatodo en la recta de las Minas”, denuncian tuiteros. La carretera Panamericana, que comunica a los Altos Mirandinos con Caracas, está repleta de tanquetas de la GNB.

(la Patilla)

***
In questa zona, da giorni, vi è un forte clima "insorgente".
 
Renovado modelo de subastas Dicom iniciará el martes 23 de mayo
Pedro Maldonado fue designado nuevo director del BCV y estará al frente del equipo que gestionará el naciente mecanismo.


17 de mayo de 2017 08:07 AM



Caracas.- El nuevo modelo de subasta de Divisas Complementarias (Dicom) iniciará operaciones el próximo 23 de mayo, informó este martes el presidente venezolano, Nicolás Maduro, en consejo de ministros desde el Palacio de Miraflores.

El nuevo mecanismo que fue anunciado el pasado 28 de marzo por el primer mandatario nacional, en el acto de clausura de ExpoVenezuela Potencia de 2017, será liderado por Pedro Maldonado, designado este martes como nuevo director del Banco Central de Venezuela (BCV).

"Aquí está la designación de Pedro Maldonado como director del BCV y jefe del nuevo Dicom que activamos a partir del martes 23 de mayo, buenas noticias para ir estabilizando los distintos elementos de la economía nacional", dijo.

El jefe de Estado aseveró que el nuevo sistema “está pensado para romper los esquemas de guerra económica” y cree que “permitirá estabilizar la especulación”.

Pidió apoyo a "todos los agentes y factores económicos financieros nacionales" para estabilizar el nuevo sistema.

De acuerdo a lo anunciado por el presidente Maduro en marzo, el sistema abarcará un total de ocho subastas mensualmente, a razón de dos a la semana. Se espera que en los próximos días se ofrezcan detalles sobre el mecanismo de las operaciones.

(El Universal)
 
Investors expect PDVSA to make bond payments

By Paul Kilby



NEW YORK (IFR) - Bonds issued by PDVSA were largely drifting on Tuesday as investors showed scant concern over some US$539m in debt payments owed this week by the embattled Venezuelan oil company.

Market participants are reporting little if any dramatic price movements on the company's bonds even as investors await news of a US$135m payment due Monday on the 6% 2026s.

PDVSA also owes US$150m on the 6% 2024s today, and a combined US$254m on the 9% 2021s and 9.75% 2035s on Wednesday.

"The market was focused yesterday on the rumor that people weren't seeing cash in their accounts, but it is our understanding that payments are being made by PDVSA," said Jorge Piedrahita, CEO of brokerage Torino Capital.

The PDVSA 2024s were trading early Tuesday afternoon at 39.27, down a touch from 39.45 seen on Monday, while the other bonds with payments due this week have barely traded, according to MarketAxess.

"If investors thought a default was coming it would have been reflected in bonds prices," said Piedrahita. "It usually takes payments a day or two to reflect in customer accounts.

With the state-controlled entity covering a bulky US$2.1bn amortization in April, markets participants see little reason why the government would fail to come through on this occasion.

Last year, the borrower did use the grace period on the very same bonds. But bondholders largely put such hold-ups down to glitches in the payment system or simply mismanagement that has come to characterize a government with little market savvy.


"If we have delays on those bonds, it will look like an operational (problem)," said Siobhan Morden, head of Latin America fixed-income strategy at Nomura.


"There is less concern about payment stress when PDVSA made the last payment without a decline in reserves."

This comes as President Nicolas Maduro faces calls for his resignation amid daily protests in reaction to the country's severe economic crisis.

Several analysts believe that a default or restructuring scenario is all but inevitable over the next few years, as the country's political dynamics change or the government runs out of funding options.

For now, some investors are betting on the Maduro administration's strong willingness to pay as it seeks to remain in power.

"If they were to stop paying now, the narrative would change so fast and this wouldn't help Maduro," said one investor.

(Reporting By Paul Kilby; Editing by Jack Doran)

Investors expect PDVSA to make bond payments
 
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