Electoral court expected to maintain Temer in presidency
BRMalls and Aliansce in talks to merge operations
Cattle slaughter for JBS shows sharp reduction
Petrobras and Banco do Brasil join governance model of state companies
Parente to unveil model for refining divestments and partnerships
COMMENTARY
Raymundo Costa
The day after the TSE trial
It is time for consequentialist ethics
Bet on the economic team and on the center-right in 2019
- BUSINESS
Internal probe reveals division in Usiminas management
- ECONOMY
GDP expansion fails to improve population’s well-being
- POLITICS
Government fears charge against Temer to pressure electoral court
- POLITICS
Temer focuses on economy in attempt to remain in office
- POLITICS
Bolsonaro voter doesn’t take his words so seriously
- AGRIBUSINESS
Banks reject reorganization plan of Usina São Fernando
- BUSINESS
Aché paves pathway towards greater international presence
- ECONOMY
Agriculture makes economy grow for the first time in two years
- POLITICS
Car Wash investigators gear up for battle
- POLITICS
Country still trapped in cycle of upheaval
- AGRIBUSINESS
J&F prepares strategy to defend plea agreement
- AGRIBUSINESS
Leniency deal lowers chance of fire sale at J&F
- LIFE & CULTURE
The suspense plot of Brazilian publishing
- MARKETS
Burden of corporate debt expenses has sharp drop
- AGRIBUSINESS
Arlon buys 20% of dairy group Betânia
- BUSINESS
Brio readies investments after three-year halt
- AGRIBUSINESS
Leniency deal relieves JBS, but crisis is not over yet
- AGRIBUSINESS
Extended term and ‘zero interest’ bring R$4bn discount to J&F
- MARKETS
Political crisis could shorten rate easing cycle
- AGRIBUSINESS
J&F in talks for leniency agreement in the US
- POLITICS
Temer fine-tunes survival strategy
Scandinavian telecom AINMT to buy Nextel Brasil for $200m
- Scandinavian telecom operator AINMT announces this Tuesday the purchase of Nextel in Brazil for $200 million. The transaction will be carried out in two stages. In the first, the company will inject $50 million in Nextel Brasil through NII Holdings, holding company that controls the Brazilian unit. With this capitalization, AINMT will control 30% of Nextel. When the Brazilian telco concludes negotiations to lengthen its debts, which totaled $756 million in 2016, AINMT will then begin the second stage of the transaction, Nextel Brasil's president, Roberto Rittes, told Valor. In this stage, a new investment of $150 million will be made. At the conclusion, the Scandinavians will hold a majority stake in Nextel (60%), while NII will keep the remaining 40%. Nextel Brasil has 3 million clients.
Valepar says it will not renew its share agreement after 2020
18 hours and 4 minutes ago- Three weeks ahead of Vale’s extraordinary shareholders meeting to discuss the voluntary conversion of its preferred shares into common stocks, Vale’s holding company Valepar announced that it will not renew its shareholders agreement after November 2020. Vale told Valor that the announcement is an additional clarification to investors and that no group will be able to control more than 25% of the mining company after that time without an obligation to hold a public share offering. At the upcoming shareholders meeting scheduled for June 27, shareholders will discuss the voluntary conversion at a ratio of 0.9342 common share per preferred share. Until 2020, the shareholders that make up Valepar will collectively hold around 30% of Vale due to the premium related to the stock conversion, but the situation is understood to be temporary.
Bolognesi in advanced talks to sell thermoelectric plants to Prumo
18 hours and 4 minutes ago- Rio Grande do Sul-based Bolognesi is in advanced negotiations with logistics company Prumo — now controlled by US private-equity firm EIG Global Energy Partners — for the sale of the 1.2-gigawatt thermoelectric plant Novo Tempo, in Pernambuco, along with a LNG regasification terminal. Valor has learned the deal could involve the Rio Grande thermoelectric plant, which also has 1.2GW, and would include the construction of another LNG terminal. Contacted by Valor, Bolognesi confirmed talks with Prumo. The latter, in turn, did not respond to requests for an interview. The two thermoelectric projects were sold at an auction in late 2014 for delivery in January 2019 and December 2020 for R$206.50 per megawatt-hour. At the time, investments were estimated at R$3 billion to carry out each of the projects.
Hedge plans to raise up to R$1.2bn for investments in real estate
18 hours and 4 minutes ago- Asset manager Hedge Investments plans to raise between R$1 billion and R$ 1.2 billion in the second half for investments in the real estate market. Hedge intends to raise the amount in the next 18 months with domestic and foreign investors and use the proceeds to acquire warehouses, corporate slabs and shopping centers. The company has about R$1.5 billion under management. Hedge partner André Freitas thinks the warehouse segment is likely to be the first to recover, probably by the year’s end. Hedge sees the office market improving in two years, but estimates that this process may begin earlier, in 2018, for triple-A slabs. The shopping mall segment is expected to recover in three years. The asset manager is not interested in the residential market in the short term.
China's Pengxin seeks to double sales of trading company Belagrícola
18 hours and 4 minutes ago- Chinese group Pengxin has just completed its second acquisition in the country — the purchase of the control of Paraná-based Belagrícola — and already indicates that it has ambitious plans for Brazil. Belagrícola operates in grain trading in Paraná, Santa Catarina and São Paulo, and had gross sales of R$2.8 billion last year. In an interview with Valor, Belagrícola’s president, Flavio Andreo, said the plan is to double revenues in five years, "maybe even less, depending on the circumstances." Mr. Andreo, who took over in January after the acquisition by the Chinese group, said the new controlling shareholders plan to raise Belagrícola's market share in regions where the company has been present for less than three years to 25% to 30% from the current 10% This will include areas such as Itapeva, in the south of São Paulo, and areas in the southern region of Paraná and Santa Catarina.
Cade to require sale of classroom programs of Kroton, Estácio
18 hours and 4 minutes ago- The merger between educational companies Kroton and Estácio should involve the sale of an asset related to classroom courses as well as online education, according to demands raised at the Cade antitrust court. The expectation is that the transaction is ruled upon by the court on June 28. The court has reportedly received pressure from third parties interested in the case and has faced additional scrutiny because the matter involves educational institutions. According to a report published by Bloomberg, Cade will require the sale of Anhaguera's classroom teaching program for approval of the merger.
MRV to invest R$800m through 2022 in solar power panels
18 hours and 4 minutes ago- Solar power panels will be used in MRV Engenharia's project of new buildings. The company, one of the leaders of the federal housing program’s My House, My Life, plans to include the equipment in 30% of its launches this year. In five years, that share will rise to 100%. The planned investment totals nearly R$800 million through 2022. Rubens Menin, founder and chairman of MRV, says this year 17,000 apartments will be part of buildings with photovoltaic panels. The real estate company did not disclose how many launches it will have this year. In 2016, there were 82.
MMX Sudeste to try changes in judicial recovery plan on June 20
18 hours and 4 minutes ago- MMX Sudeste, mining company of businessman Eike Batista, will try to approve changes in the company's judicial recovery plan, approved in August 2015. On June 20, there will be a general meeting of MMX Sudeste's creditors to approve the spin-off of several farms owned by the company, which two years ago had been valued at R$45 million. In total, there are about 2,500 hectares of farms that MMX expects to take to auction as isolated production units (UPIs). The farms are among the company’s main assets to pay its creditors, which are owed more than R$700 million.
- POLITICS
- ECONOMY
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