Tag Archives: Brazil

Brazil’s Disastrous Debt Dynamics Could “Create Contagion” For Emerging Markets, Barclays Warns, by Tyler Durden

From Tyler Durden at zerohedge.com:

Last week, we got the latest round of abysmal economic data out of Brazil. To summarize: GDP is in “free fall mode” (to quote Barclays), inflation hit double digits for the first time in over a decade, and unemployment soared to 7.9% in August, up sharply from just 4.3% a year earlier.

Put simply: it’s a full on economic meltdown.

The situation is made immeasurably worse by the country’s seemingly intractable political quagmire. The standoff between President Dilma Rousseff (who has been accused of cooking the fiscal books) and House Speaker Eduardo Cunha (who has been implicated in a kickback scheme tied to Petrobras) has led to a veritable stalemate that’s made it exceedingly difficult for Rousseff and her embattled finance minister Joaquim Levy to push through badly needed austerity measures.

Rousseff scored a victory on the austerity front on Wednesday when lawmakers approved her veto of a bill that would have raised retirement payments alongside the minimum wage, but this is an uphill battle and while incremental wins may be enough to give the beleaguered BRL some temporary respite, the medium- to long-term outlook is abysmal.

As Brazil continues to muddle through what has become a stagflationary nightmare, Barclays is out with a fresh look at the country’s debt dynamics and unsurprisingly, the picture isn’t pretty.

The road ahead depends on fiscal policy, Barclays begins, and that, given the current dynamic, is not a good thing. “Even if politics were uncomplicated and policy unconstrained, Brazil would still face enormous challenges adjusting to far less supportive local and global conditions,” the bank notes, referencing the now familiar laundry list of EM problems including slumping commodity prices, lackluster demand from China, the yuan deval (bye, bye trade competitiveness), and the incipient threat of a Fed hike and thus an even stronger USD.

“Investors are also grappling with the prospect of a prolonged, unsustainable fiscal policy framework,” Barclays adds.

To continue reading: Brazil’s Disastrous Debt Dynamics Could “Create Contagion” For Emerging Markets

 

Petrobras’s Dangerous Debt Math: $24 Billion Owed in 24 Months, by Jonathan Levin and Peter Millard

The debt contraction slowly, but surely, gathers steam. From Jonathan Levin and Peter Millard at bloomberg.com:

The sovereign is weak, too, but investors are counting on it

Petrobras has options in crisis, just not palatable ones

The debt clock is ticking down at Brazil’s troubled oil giant, Petrobras. Next up: $24 billion of repayments over 24 months.

That’s a towering hurdle for a company that hasn’t generated free cash flow for eight years and whose borrowing rates are soaring. Annual debt servicing costs have doubled to 20.3 billion reais ($5.4 billion) in the past three years.

The delicate task of managing the massive $128 billion mound of debt accumulated by Petroleo Brasileiro SA — 84 percent of it in foreign currencies — falls to the two banking veterans parachuted atop the company earlier this year, CEO Aldemir Bendine, 51, and Chief Financial Officer Ivan Monteiro, 55. The pair came from the state-controlled Banco de Brasil SA to contain the damage from the biggest corruption scandal in the country’s history.

While prosecutors continue to grind away at years of suspicious dealings, Act II for the boys from the Bank of Brazil will further test their mettle. The challenge of Petrobras’s runaway debt, which has grown four-fold in five years, has been exacerbated by low oil prices, a weak currency and the Brazilian government’s own fiscal travails.

“If you considered them to be totally independent and there were no chance of any kind of government support, I think the risk of default would certainly be there in a big way,” said Jason Trujillo, an Atlanta-based fixed-income analyst at Invesco Ltd.

Petrobras total debt has quadrupled in five years

Petrobras is not without options, but they tend to be either politically unpalatable or unattractive to the marketplace. Bendine is actively trying to peddle off minority stakes in the Rio de Janeiro-based oil producer’s pipeline and gas station units, among others, but that plan is behind schedule and faces fierce opposition from the oil industry’s most powerful union.

Other alternatives are also running up against resistance from one interest group or another. The only source of comfort for many bondholders is the belief the Brazilian government would stop at nothing to save the country’s biggest company — though, even at that, Trujillo said markets are “lessening the amount of implied government support.”

To continue reading: Petrobras’s Dangerous Debt Math

China Slowdown, “Global Turbulence” Trigger Collapse of Export Orders for German Equipment Makers, by Wolf Richter

The Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 165 points today. Meanwhile in the real world of global business, thing are getting worse, as Wolf Richter documents virtually every day. Today from Richter, at wolfstreet.com:

“Ripples are now spreading to other key markets.”

It hasn’t hit overall German exports yet. Year-to-date through August, total exports are up 6.6% from last year and are expected to set another record by year-end. Exuberance in Germany’s well-oiled export machinery still reigns.

But beneath the surface, German plant and machinery makers are getting slammed by the recessions in Russia and Brazil, the slowdown in China that officially still doesn’t exist, and the “turbulence” in the global markets, according to a report today by the German Engineering Federation VDMA.

The association represents over 3,100 mostly medium-sized companies in the capital goods industry. Mechanical engineering is Germany’s forte. Many of the companies are world leaders. They cover the “entire process chain” in the mechanical engineering sector, according to the VDMA, including:

Associated tools and components, of process, production, manufacturing, drive-train and automation engineering, office and information technology, software, and product-related services, i.e. from components to plants, from system suppliers and system integrators through to service providers.

They employ over 1 million workers that develop and produce “key technologies for the global market,” with 76% of their revenues derived from exports. Alas, about 42% of these exports are headed to developing economies, including Russia, Brazil, and particularly China.

These economies are now in trouble. And for German plant and equipment makers, things have come unglued. In September, total orders plunged 13% year-over-year. While domestic business edged up 1%, export orders plummeted 18%.

The export crash wasn’t a one-month blip. For the first nine months, overall orders dropped 1%. While domestic orders rose 2%, and export orders from the Eurozone jumped 13%, orders from outside the Eurozone dropped 7%. Hidden in the numbers is the recent deterioration in export orders: Over the three-month period between July and September (as domestic orders rose 8%), total export orders fell 6%, topped off by the 18% plunge in September.

To continue reading: Collapse of Export Orders for German Equipment Makers

Herd Extinct, by Robert Gore

The crowd never thinks. People are only comfortable in a pack, and they’re most comfortable in one that’s racing off a cliff.

The Golden Pinnacle

Herd animals herd because there is safety in numbers. Even if the wolves or lions attack, they’re only going to get a small percentage of the herd. Such attacks even have an evolutionary advantage: they eliminate sick or weak members. Those who think humans are not herd animals labor under such vast misconceptions that they are beyond the reach of SLL.

One herd, Wall Street-Washington economists, surpass wildebeests and sheep. Their behavior, because it is so uniform, can easily be described. Membership in one of two subspecies is required: Keynesians or monetarists. Both have long histories of predictions that didn’t predict and policy remedies that didn’t remedy, but they all believe because they all believe. Intellectual foundations this shaky increase individual and group insecurity, so they base their work on the same set of statistics emanating from the government. The government’s assumptions, methodologies, and conclusions are never questioned, except by outcasts from the herd. After all, those assumptions, methodologies, and conclusions come from the herd itself.

The instinctive defensive tactics of the herd are the consensus and the wavering straight line. Economists are well aware of the expectations and predictions of other economists, and tend to cluster tightly around a given consensus. Occasionally an economist will deviate by a quarter or a half of a percentage point from the consensus, instead of the usual range of a tenth of a percent either way. It is thought by those who study these matters that this exaggerated and ostentatious display of independence can, if done only occasionally, make the individual stand out and thus promote advancement within the herd. Or perhaps it’s to attract a mate. Further study is required.

The wavering straight line projects the most recent past into the future. It is considered good form not to make perfectly linear projections, thus the “wavering.” The standard projection will be: We (as herd animals, plural pronouns are preferred) see GDP increasing from 2.2 to 2.4 percent this quarter. Or: We see inflation moderating from .3 to .2 percent. It is also considered good form to make projections that show increases in desirable variables and decreases in undesirable variables. What is not good form is to predict a clean break, a clearly nonlinear outcome, especially if it can be characterized as negative (e.g., the economy is headed into recession). Such a prediction will lead to expulsion from the herd, unless the prediction is correct, in which case the predictor will be killed.

The herd has called for an imminent “lift off” in the US economy, and it has been doing so for six years. During that time the US government has issued unprecedented amounts of debt (Keynesianism), the Federal Reserve has engaged in unprecedented debt monetization and interest rate suppression (monetarism), and the US has been unable to achieve even one year of the 3 percent annual growth that used to be routine. The herd has responded by either calling for more debt, monetization, and suppression, or positing that for some reason there have been structural changes in the US economy that have led to “secular stagnation.” The herd has not explored the possibility that all that debt, monetization, and suppression are part of the problem rather than the solution. Herds never question their own articles of faith.

However, just as the more astute and aware sheep and wildebeests will sense the wolves and lions stalking the herd, a few of the economists sense something amiss. Slow growth may not give way to lift off, but rather recession, or worse. Ominous portents are piling up.

Assurances have been given that the carnage in natural resources will remain contained, echoing assurances made in 2006 and 2007 concerning housing and mortgage finance. However, there has been no V-shaped recovery in oil, natural gas, copper, coal, fertilizer components, zinc, nickel, and other natural resources; the prices of many are still going down. Producers are reluctantly concluding that no happy outcomes are in the offing. Projects are being shelved and inventories and other assets dumped on the market at whatever prices they can fetch. Glencore, the Swiss mining company, has halted production at two huge African copper mines and pledging to sell up to $10 billion to cut its debt. It’s no sure thing that the company will survive; the exploding premiums on credit default swap (CDS) protection for its debt indicate substantial credit-market doubt.

Cutting debt has become all the rage. If you wanted to put together a fracking firm, now would be the time to do so. Prime drilling rigs and properties are available cheap as debt incurred when oil was $100 a barrel weighs heavily now that oil is in the forties (“Shale Drillers Turn to Asset Sales as Early Swagger Wanes,” by Bradley Olson, SLL, 9/11/15). Oil and gas producer Samson Resource Corp., midwifed by private equity firm KKR, just filed for bankruptcy. KKR and its partners will take a $4.1 billion hit, not chump change even for KKR. And so the not-contained carnage in natural resources ripples out in all directions. The losses inflicted on creditors are just one of the more obvious ripples.

The debt-fueled Chinese “miracle” is over. China was the engine of global demand on the way up; it’s at the epicenter of debt contraction on the way down. It was the dream of perpetual Chinese hyper-growth that led so many companies to take on debt and ramp up capital spending and production. China has built infrastructure and whole cities on spec, debt-funded malinvestment on command and control steroids. Even communists have their “uh oh” moments, when they realize that something has to give. Let a thousand, or a million, or a billion, debts contract. China’s demand is dropping like a stone and it is exporting goods—steel, aluminum, and diesel—that for years it imported. Everyone knows that its claimed 7 percent growth is fiction, but nobody knows what the real number is. Lurking within the state-dominated banking system is a lot of rancid debt. The cherry on the sundae: last year the government promoted a margin-fueled stock bubble that has now burst.

Not surprisingly, the money that flowed into China from trade surpluses and foreign investment has reversed as well, pressuring the yuan’s exchange value. In a stark illustration of the Command and Control Futility Principle (governments and central banks can control one, but not all variables in a multi-variable system), China needs to lower the yuan’s value to remain competitive in global trade, but needs to raise its value to keep capital from fleeing. It recently undertook a token devaluation against the dollar that precipitated global financial panic, but at the same time it has been selling some of its hoard of US Treasury debt to buy yuan to support its value. The Chinese government has made schizophrenia official policy because it is impotent against the great global debt contraction now underway. It feels compelled to do something because governments always do something, invariably making matters worse.

The Chinese ramifications aren’t ripples; they’re shockwaves. Brazil, its economy grown dependent on exports to China, has entered recession; had its debt rating knocked down to below investment grade; seen its currency make new lows almost daily, and has been rocked by a scandal implicating much of its elite—including President Dilma Rousseff, whose approval rating is a single digit—and the national oil company, Petrobras, upon whose massive debt, much of it dollar-denominated, traders are making book on bankruptcy. Brazil is the poster child for many China-dependent emerging market nations.

Will the world pull out of this debt contraction? Will plunging high-yield, equity, commodity, and emerging market currency markets reverse course? Can governments and central banks save the day? Will the economic tsunami miss US shores? Not a chance, not a chance, not a chance, and not a chance, no matter how many mainstream economists swear otherwise on their stacks of Keynes and Friedman.

World trade volumes and shipping rates are going from new lows to new lowers. In credit markets, the interest spread between what the US Treasury and bank borrowers of Eurodollars pay (a measure of bank risk) is growing, junk bond yields are rising, CDS spreads are widening, and default rates are notching up, tolling bells for other markets, especially equity markets. (The same things happened in 2007; the following year was not a good one for equities). Stock markets have sold off since the head of the world’s most important central bank put a dovish spin on her announcement that free money would not be terminated; the black magic no longer works.

In the US, second quarter S&P earnings growth was negative, even while corporations spent 108 percent of their free cash flow on dividends and buybacks (“Why Stocks Are Sliding: For The First Time Since 2009 Spending On Buybacks Surpasses Free Cash Flow,” by Tyler Durden, SLL, 9/23/15). Nothing offers a connect-the-dots illustration better than industrial bellwether Caterpillar, which makes many of the machines used around the world to extract minerals and build buildings and infrastructure. Today, after 33 straight months of declining year-over-year sales, it announced it will lay off 10,000 workers.

While the broad contours of what’s to come are visible, the details will only emerge over time. There is one certainty. When things have gotten considerably worse, a panicked cry will sound from the economist herd: Nobody could have seen this coming! It is to be hoped that it sounds just before they run off a cliff, extinguishing the species.

STEP OUT FROM THE HERD

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AMAZON

KINDLE

NOOK

Rousseff Coup Could Sink Brazil, Emerging Markets, from Shock Exchange

From Shock Exchange via zerohedge:

Rousseff Coup Could Sink Brazil, Emerging Markets

Brazil’s President Dilma Rousseff’s approval rating has plummeted to 8% amid the country’s worst recession in two decades. Her job is at risk too. Earlier this week opponents filed a petition to impeach Rousseff due to allegations of corruption by former president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva at oil giant Petrobras of nearly $2 billion:

This week opponents of Ms Rousseff, incensed by allegations that “pixulecos” mostly involving ruling coalition politicians have cost Petrobras at least R$6bn (US$1.5bn), took their campaign to congress by filing a petition for impeachment with the speaker of the lower house Eduardo Cunha … The petition from Mr [Helio] Bicudo, which was backed by the opposition in congress, marks the start of what could be a long process to try to topple the former Marxist guerrilla only nine months into her second four-year term.

Rousseff – hand-picked by Lula da Silva to succeed him – appears to be caught up in da Silva’s backdraft. Opposition parties also claim she violated Brazil’s fiscal responsibility law when she doctored government accounts to allow more public spending prior to the October election last year. Rousseff in turn described the attempt to use Brazil’s economic crisis as an opportunity to seize power a modern day coup.

Inopportune Time For A Coup

Petrobras In Dire Straits

Political turmoil could not have come at a worst time. The Petrobras debacle has been a point of contention for the populace. While the elite profited from bribes and kickbacks at the state-owned oil giant, Petrobras is laying off workers and cutting supplier contracts in order to stem cash burn.

And those efforts may still not be enough to stave off bankruptcy. With $134 billion in debt – $90 billion of it dollar-denominated – Petrobras is the world’s most-indebted oil company. With oil prices 60% below their Q2 2014 peak, Petrobras will likely crumble under its debt load.

Budget Requires All Hands On Deck

Brazil’s fiscal picture is not much better. The economy contracted nearly 2% in Q2 and the Brazilian real has depreciated against the U.S. dollar by nearly 40% over the past year. That said, the country will find it difficult to grow revenues amid declining commodities prices. Including interest payments, the country’s budget deficit was projected to grow to 8%-9% of GDP, prompting S&P to downgrade the Brazil to junk status:

To continue reading: Rousseff Coup Could Sink Brazil

World Is Now “More Exposed than Ever” to Explosive Dollar, by Wolf Richter

The debt contraction finds the foreign debtors carrying almost $10 trillion in dollar-denominated debt, which means they’re short the dollar. The dollar’s 18 percent rise since June of last year is inflicting a lot of pain. From Wolf Richter at wolf street.com:

One of the craziest financial creations on earth, available only near the peak of enormous credit bubbles when nothing can ever go wrong, became available this spring: 100-year bonds issued by governments or companies in emerging countries, in currencies they don’t control.

Yield hungry investors in developed markets who purposefully had been driven to near-insanity and drunken benightedness by the zero-interest-rate policies of central banks around the globe jumped on them. For them, it was the way to nirvana.

At the peak of Draghi’s QE hype in April, Mexico, which has a long history of debt crises, was able to sell €1.5 billion of 100-year bonds denominated in euros because yields were even lower in the Eurozone and bond fund managers there even more desperate and insane; at a ludicrously low yield to maturity of 4.2%.

Even more inexplicable was just how Petrobras, Brazil state-controlled oil company, was able to bamboozle investors on June 2 into buying its 100-year dollar-denominated bonds.

At the time, the company had just ended a five-month delay in releasing its financial statements. It’s tangled up in a horrendous corruption scandal that has reached the highest echelons of political power. It’s backed by the Brazilian government whose credit rating, as everyone had been expecting for months, was cut to junk last week by Standard and Poor’s. To top it off, Brazil has been facing a deep recession and a plunging currency, which makes paying off dollar-denominated debt prohibitively expensive.

And it renders that debt toxic.

Petrobras, whose credit rating was cut to junk the day after Brazil’s – though Moody’s had cut it to junk seven months ago – faces other, even bigger problems: over $130 billion in debt, the most of any oil company, and the terrific collapse in oil prices.

OK, in the second quarter, oil rallied sharply, and some bond-fund folks might have thought that the oil bust was over though the entire world was still practically swimming in oil. And amidst this buoyant mood about Petrobras’ prospects, the company was able to sell $2.5 billion of 100-year dollar-denominated 6.85% bonds to fund managers in the US and elsewhere who were blinded by their own optimism and driven to insanity by years of zero-interest-rate policies.

Now, three months later, these “century bonds” have gone to heck.

The three largest holders of these bonds are Pacific Investment Management, Fidelity, and Capital Group, according to Bloomberg. After Petrobras’ credit rating was cut last week, the bonds traded at 69.5 cents on the dollar.

That’s a big loss for these geniuses, or rather for their clients, in just three months.

To continue reading: World Is Now “More Exposed than Ever” to Dollar

The Seventh-Largest Economy in the World Spirals Down, by Wolf Richter

BRICS may soon mean Bankrupt, Ruined, & Insolvent, Creditors Screwed. The B in the tradition BRICS formulation, Brazil, with its natural resource based economy that isdependent on China’s (the C in BRICS) economic health, is on the leading edge of debt deflation and depression. Throw in a huge scandal at state oil company Petrobas, the expense of hosting the 2016 Olympics, broken promises to fix Rio de Janeiro’s decrepit sewage systems in time for next year’s games, and a president who is getting less than 10 percent approval ratings, and things are looking bleak. From Wolf Richter at wolfstreet.com:

HSBC, which knows a thing or two about the world, and about Brazil, is bailing out of Brazil.

It’s unloading its “entire business in Brazil,” it said this week, including retail banking and insurance. It will hand its long list of wealthy clients and over 21,000 employees to Bradesco, one of the largest private banks in Brazil, for $5.2 billion. Too much? Bradesco’s stock has since plunged over 9%.

Once the deal gets regulatory approval and closes, HSBC is out of Brazil. “The transaction represents a significant step in the execution of the actions announced during the Investor Update on 9 June 2015,” it said. After that update, Reuters had described HSBC’s motivations with these choice words:

For shareholders, betting on Brazil was risky as lenders grapple with tax hikes, weak credit demand, rising defaults, and the impact of what looks likely to be the country’s worst recession in over two decades.

The seventh largest economy in the world in 2014, according to the World Bank, is spiraling down, with private sector output, as Markit put it, falling at the “sharpest pace since March 2009.”

This is how Markit titled its Brazil Services PMI report on Wednesday: “Service sector activity drops at joint-fastest rate in survey history.”

The index hit 39.1 in July (50 is the dividing line between contraction and expansion), the fifth month in a row of contraction, with all sub-sectors in the survey “registering substantial falls in business activity.”

To add to the toxic mix, costs soared, with the rate of increase reaching an 81-month high, third fasted in survey history, due to “inflationary pressures, exchange rate factors, and client fee adjustment.” No green shoots in the immediate future: new orders fell for the fifth month in a row. The “deteriorating operating environment” caused the pace of job losses to accelerate “to a survey record.”

Some companies still nurtured glimmers of hope: 29% of them expected activity to be higher in one year, based on the notion that the economy would somehow recover “in the coming months.”

This gloomy report on the service sector came on the heels of Markit’s Manufacturing PMI report, which had inched up to a less dreadful 47.2 in July, but remained “among the lowest since 2011, reflecting a slumping economy.”

There too were some glimmers of hope, such as the “stabilization” of export orders and slower rates of declines in some categories, but mostly it was unadulterated gloom:

“Brazil’s manufacturing slump extended to July.” New orders and production were in contraction for the sixth month in a row, “with tough economic conditions being widely cited by survey respondents.” Companies tried to control their ballooning costs by shedding jobs.

To continue reading: The Seventh-Largest Economy in the World Spirals Down