Titoli di Stato paesi-emergenti VENEZUELA e Petroleos de Venezuela - Cap. 2

"Venezuela está en el piso, pero en 10 años puede tener un PBI similar al del 2012" Entrevista a Asdrúbal Oliveros, director de @ecoanalitica, por @Gestionpe

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Maduro si merica un calcio da farlo volare in orbita solo per questo! lui e tutta la feccia malata che lo sostiene, dal graduato al semplice simpatizzante nei 3d
Troppo comodo eliminarlo; deve pagare fino all'ultimo per le sofferenze che ha causato e continua a causare
Un uomo che da presidente di una nazione guardava le telenovela in tv
Ma guardi che non sono malati.... anzi
Godono di ottima salute
Per quanto riguarda il termine “feccia” la invito ad evitare di accostare tale termine dispregiativo si sostenitori e a utenti dei 3d
Se pur in disaccordo con loro siamo pur sempre in regime democratico pertanto ognuno è libero di esprimere i propri sentimenti
Grazie
 
Rammento le rimostranze di alcuni analisti per aver fornito un efficace warrant/PIL per i bondholder (oltre ad un poco convincente - ma efficace per l'Argentina - trentennale).

Credo ci si muoverà entro questi limiti.

Carib rammenti il warrant dato alla Grecia?

gli analisti.. analizzano. non ristrutturano ne si sostituiscono ai governi.
il warrant greco.. vale quasi nulla, in assenza di crescita.
 
JPMorgan Chase & Co. suddenly finds itself caught in the middle of the struggle for power in Venezuela. The dilemma surrounds the bank’s bond indexes, long the industry standard for gauging emerging-market performance. After the U.S. slapped sweeping sanctions on Nicolas Maduro’s regime last week, trading in the nation’s defaulted debt grounded to a halt -- a development that typically would prompt JPMorgan to yank the notes from its indexes.



But bondholders as well as some Venezuelan politicians aligned with Juan Guaido, the U.S.-backed lawmaker trying to oust Maduro, are now actively lobbying to get JPMorgan to keep the debt in the index.



For creditors, the rationale is straight-forward: Removing Venezuela from the index would pressure them to dump the securities at rock-bottom prices. For those in Guaido’s camp, it’s a bit more complicated. Their concern is that by forcing mutual funds, ETFs and other traditional investors to unload the debt, it will wind up in the hands of hedge funds that are more aggressive and potentially even litigious in bond restructurings. That in turn will hurt their efforts to impose a sizable haircuton creditors -- a key part of their plan to stabilize the crisis-torn country if they manage to take power.



A group of Venezuelan lawmakers has been holding calls with officials at JPMorgan. They fear a messy debt restructuring akin to the one seen in Argentina after its 2001 default, which resulted in years of legal wrangling that left the country locked out of international capital markets for more than a decade. Already, some London-based hedge funds have shown an increased interest in Venezuelan debt on the possibility that it may soon become cheap.



“There have been conversations with JPMorgan,” said Carlos Paparoni, an opposition lawmaker and president of the congressional finance commission. “Our interest is in a fast, trustworthy and friendly restructuring.”
 

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