[Home] [Headlines] [Latest Articles] [Latest Comments] [Post] [Mail] [Sign-in] [Setup] [Help] [Register]
Status: Not Logged In; Sign In
International News Title: Raiders of the Caracas ark: Guess who’s profiting off Veneuzela’s collapse? As Caracas struggles to contain an economic meltdown and violent street protests, Moscow is using its position as Venezuelas lender of last resort to gain more control over the OPEC nations crude reserves, the largest in the world. Venezuelas state-owned oil firm, Petroleos de Venezuela (PDVSA), has been secretly negotiating since at least early this year with Russias biggest state-owned oil company, Rosneft offering ownership interests in up to nine of Venezuelas most productive petroleum projects, according to a top Venezuelan government official and two industry sources familiar with the talks. This is a survival technique in more than one way. Right now, Venezuela isnt benefitting from its oil reserves because of low prices, but also because the expropriations of assets by foreign firms has led to a brain drain. The political apparatchiks who now run PDVSA dont have the talent to boost production, even if the financial incentives still existed to do it. That situation has gotten much worse over the past year, as this chart from Trading Economics shows: Note when the decline in production started for Venezuela. The country had built up its oil industry in the early 1990s with international partnerships, with production peaking in the late 1990s as Hugo Chavez came to power. Except for a few brief bursts of production in 2012-14, its been downhill ever since, and is rapidly crashing now. The assets dont do Maduro any good if they remain in the ground, and partnering with Putin and Rosneft makes sense if they can ramp up production. It does, however, completely negate everything Chavez and Maduro have claimed about their expertise since ramping up the socialist utopia that now has the country starving and marching in the streets. Maduro needs hard currency, and he needs it now before the people put him up against the wall. The opportunity for Putin to get in on the cheap is certainly attractive, but its not clear why Putin would want to increase Venezuelan production. Russias problem at the moment is low crude prices, which has hammered their energy-centered economy. OPEC is trying to instill production discipline, and may be finally succeeding a bit, thanks to oversell of US supply, as Bloomberg reported yesterday. The consortium will have to deal with rebounding production in Libya and Nigeria, and possibly in Iraq, while reducing overall daily output by over 250 million barrels among the other producers, including Venezuela. He might have more incentives to keep Venezuelan production low to increase domestic production prices, in which case Maduros about to really stiff Venezuelans. Mostly, though, Putins snapping up these assets because theyre cheap, and because he can. And if Maduro thinks he can play the expropriation game with Putin, well
good luck trying it. Hes about to find out that becoming a client state of Russia is a lot more permanent than partnering up with ExxonMobil. Unless the Venezuelan people act to eject Maduro soon, theyll be stuck in that position for a long, long time. Poster Comment: I think the next big rush of illegals for our border will be Venezuelans. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: Tooconservative (#0)
Sounds like a solid, secure investment -- until Venezuela simply decides to take it back. An even better investment would be some farms in Zimbabwe. Or Cuba. Invest a couple of million in businesses in Cuba. Another solid opportunity.
|
||
[Home] [Headlines] [Latest Articles] [Latest Comments] [Post] [Mail] [Sign-in] [Setup] [Help] [Register]
|