Titoli di Stato paesi-emergenti VENEZUELA e Petroleos de Venezuela - Cap. 2 (22 lettori)

tommy271

Forumer storico
Maradona jugó fútbol con Rafael Lacava y Maduro


El astro del fútbol argentino viajó a Venezuela para brindarle su apoyo al presidente


Por GDA | LA NACIÓN | ARGENTINA
08 DE NOVIEMBRE DE 2017 08:59 AM | ACTUALIZADO EL 08 DE NOVIEMBRE DE 2017 09:01 AM


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El día en que se celebró la revolución bolchevique, el astro del fútbol argentino Diego Armando Maradona y el presidente Nicolás Maduro participaron en un encuentro amistoso de fútbol. El 10 explicó: "Vengo a darle mi apoyo con mi familia en un vuelo de 20 horas y pico, horas que llevo en mi corazón porque vi a un Nicolás fuerte que no afloja".

A continuación, al dirigirse al mandatario venezolano, dijo: "Eso en fútbol es mucho, en fútbol por más que pierdas 3 a 0 no aflojas nunca y vos veo que no aflojaste nunca y te la juzgaste por los venezolanos".

El encuentro se desarrolló en la cancha de la Policía Militar en Fuerte Tiuna (Caracas), sede del equipo de fútbol venezolano Atlético Venezuela. Entre otras figuras de la política, participaron Tareck El Aissami, vicepresidente ejecutivo; Pedro Infante, ministro para la Juventud y Deporte; y Rafael Lacava, gobernador del estado Carabobo.

Maradona llegó a Venezuela para afinar los detalles del programa De la Mano del Diez que se estrenará el 1° de diciembre en la televisora multiestatal Telesur y en el que se tratarán los pormenores de la Copa Mundial de la Fútbol Rusia 2018 organizada por la Federación Internacional de Fútbol Asociado.

***
Questa è la notizia del giorno in Venezuela, il resto a seguire ...
 

Ventodivino

מגן ולא יראה

Non sono abbonato a Sky e a quell'altra roba a pagamento in TV, ma al FT sì...:)

Eccolo :




The Trump administration should dramatically tighten its sanctions on Venezuela by imposing a full embargo on its oil exports to the US, according to Argentine president Mauricio Macri, who said the move would enjoy broad support across Latin America. President Donald Trump unveiled a series of financial sanctions on Venezuela and members of its government over the summer, including prohibiting any US institutions from lending more money to the country. But he stopped shy of more draconian measures such as a full embargo on Venezuelan oil exports to the US. Given the worsening situation for Venezuela, the administration should “absolutely” introduce a comprehensive ban on the country’s oil exports to the US, the Argentine president told the FT in an interview in New York on Tuesday evening. “I think we should go to a full oil embargo,” Mr Macri said. “Things have gotten worse and worse. Now, it’s really a painful situation. Poverty is going up every day, sanitary conditions are getting worse every day.” The Argentine president is the first Latin American leader to openly advocate such as tough step. But Mr Macri, a centre-right politician who has succeeded in transforming Argentina from an international pariah to one of Latin America’s emerging starlets, said there would be “broad support” across the region for such a draconian measure, despite the hardship it would entail. “We have been talking about this many times with many people over the past month,” he told the FT. Venezuela’s economic and financial crisis has deepened lately, with president Nicolás Maduro announcing last week that the country could no longer service its foreign debts, summoning bondholders to talks in Caracas next week to discuss a restructuring. Analysts expect the move to result in a disorderly default in the coming days, which will worsen an already precarious situation. The US is considered unlikely to block all imports of Venezuelan crude, as that would create significant disruption in its refining industry. US imports of Venezuelan oil have been running at about 800,000 barrels per day, roughly 8 per cent of the country’s total crude imports last year. Citgo, the US downstream subsidiary of Venezuela’s state oil company PDVSA, is a large buyer of the country’s crude and employs 3,500 people at three refineries in Louisiana and Texas. In August, senators from states with refineries along the gulf coast wrote to Mr Trump warning that “unilateral sanctions” against Venezuela “could harm the US economy, impair the global competitiveness of our businesses and raise costs for our consumers.” Recommended FT View: The geopolitics of Venezuela’s debt Markets Insight: Venezuelan bondholders face showdown in Caracas Listen: Ricardo Hausmann on the tragedy in Venezuela However, Senator Bill Nelson, the Democratic representative of Florida, on Tuesday wrote an open letter to Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin urging him to impose tougher sanctions on the Venezuelan regime, and to also consider banning Venezuelan oil imports. “PDVSA [the state oil company] should be a source of wealth for the Venezuelan people, but because of the corruption of the socialist government and years of mismanagement, it has become a source of cash for Maduro and his cronies to line their pockets,” Senator Nelson wrote. “I encourage you to seek the support of our European allies in imposing both targeted and sectoral sanctions on the Venezuelan regime, too.” The Lima Group, a regional block of countries set up this summer to pressure Venezuela into free elections, in late October said that more sanctions might be needed to isolate the regime and hasten a return to democracy. “If necessary, we must put added pressure on the Maduro regime by taking concrete steps to further isolate it from the international community,” Chrystia Freeland, Canada’s foreign minister, said at the group’s latest meeting in Toronto. Mr Macri said that the Lima Group was doing a “good job” by putting diplomatic pressure on Venezuela. But “that is all we can do. The United States can do more,” he said. “I would cut off the resources of Maduro and keep them isolated from the rest of the community.”


PS
non credo.
 

tommy271

Forumer storico
Non sono abbonato a Sky e a quell'altra roba a pagamento in TV, ma al FT sì...:)

Eccolo :




The Trump administration should dramatically tighten its sanctions on Venezuela by imposing a full embargo on its oil exports to the US, according to Argentine president Mauricio Macri, who said the move would enjoy broad support across Latin America. President Donald Trump unveiled a series of financial sanctions on Venezuela and members of its government over the summer, including prohibiting any US institutions from lending more money to the country. But he stopped shy of more draconian measures such as a full embargo on Venezuelan oil exports to the US. Given the worsening situation for Venezuela, the administration should “absolutely” introduce a comprehensive ban on the country’s oil exports to the US, the Argentine president told the FT in an interview in New York on Tuesday evening. “I think we should go to a full oil embargo,” Mr Macri said. “Things have gotten worse and worse. Now, it’s really a painful situation. Poverty is going up every day, sanitary conditions are getting worse every day.” The Argentine president is the first Latin American leader to openly advocate such as tough step. But Mr Macri, a centre-right politician who has succeeded in transforming Argentina from an international pariah to one of Latin America’s emerging starlets, said there would be “broad support” across the region for such a draconian measure, despite the hardship it would entail. “We have been talking about this many times with many people over the past month,” he told the FT. Venezuela’s economic and financial crisis has deepened lately, with president Nicolás Maduro announcing last week that the country could no longer service its foreign debts, summoning bondholders to talks in Caracas next week to discuss a restructuring. Analysts expect the move to result in a disorderly default in the coming days, which will worsen an already precarious situation. The US is considered unlikely to block all imports of Venezuelan crude, as that would create significant disruption in its refining industry. US imports of Venezuelan oil have been running at about 800,000 barrels per day, roughly 8 per cent of the country’s total crude imports last year. Citgo, the US downstream subsidiary of Venezuela’s state oil company PDVSA, is a large buyer of the country’s crude and employs 3,500 people at three refineries in Louisiana and Texas. In August, senators from states with refineries along the gulf coast wrote to Mr Trump warning that “unilateral sanctions” against Venezuela “could harm the US economy, impair the global competitiveness of our businesses and raise costs for our consumers.” Recommended FT View: The geopolitics of Venezuela’s debt Markets Insight: Venezuelan bondholders face showdown in Caracas Listen: Ricardo Hausmann on the tragedy in Venezuela However, Senator Bill Nelson, the Democratic representative of Florida, on Tuesday wrote an open letter to Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin urging him to impose tougher sanctions on the Venezuelan regime, and to also consider banning Venezuelan oil imports. “PDVSA [the state oil company] should be a source of wealth for the Venezuelan people, but because of the corruption of the socialist government and years of mismanagement, it has become a source of cash for Maduro and his cronies to line their pockets,” Senator Nelson wrote. “I encourage you to seek the support of our European allies in imposing both targeted and sectoral sanctions on the Venezuelan regime, too.” The Lima Group, a regional block of countries set up this summer to pressure Venezuela into free elections, in late October said that more sanctions might be needed to isolate the regime and hasten a return to democracy. “If necessary, we must put added pressure on the Maduro regime by taking concrete steps to further isolate it from the international community,” Chrystia Freeland, Canada’s foreign minister, said at the group’s latest meeting in Toronto. Mr Macri said that the Lima Group was doing a “good job” by putting diplomatic pressure on Venezuela. But “that is all we can do. The United States can do more,” he said. “I would cut off the resources of Maduro and keep them isolated from the rest of the community.”


PS
non credo.

Trump si è sempre mostrato piuttosto tiepido, sulle sanzioni oil, anche quando potevano rivelarsi necessarie.
Vedremo ...
 

tommy271

Forumer storico
Banca y Negocios‏ @bancaynegocios



Un dato a destacar es que menos del 15% de los defaults soberanos ocurridos en el mundo desde 1992 han llevado a un cambio gubernamental

Una reestructuración forzada de la deuda Pdvsa y Soberana empujaría el centro de negociación a New York, haciendo para el gobierno más difícil el control de esta.
 

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