FACTBOX-Venezuela's state takeovers under Chavez...
posted on
Dec 04, 2009 11:04AM
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Friday December 04, 2009 06:48:15 PM GMT
Dec 4 (Reuters) - Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez has twice in one week threatened to nationalize some of the nation's banks or even the entire financial system. While analysts say a widespread takeover is unlikely, Chavez has nationalized many economic sectors in recent years, and his words cannot be taken lightly.
The government closed down four small failing banks on Monday, and Chavez's comments triggered worries that more could fall. Investors responded by dumping Venezuelan bonds and the bolivar currency.
Following are some key events in Chavez's 10-year push to build a socialist state in Venezuela, an OPEC member that is also South America's top oil exporter.
OIL
In 2007, Chavez's government took a majority stake in four oil projects operating in the Orinoco river basin worth an estimated $30 billion. U.S. oil majors Exxon Mobil Corp and ConocoPhillips quit the country over the move and filed arbitration claims against Venezuela. France's Total SA and Norway's StatoilHydro received around $1 billion in compensation after reducing their holdings. BP Plc and Chevron Corp remained as minority partners. This year Chavez seized a major gas injection project belonging to Williams Cos Inc and a range of assets from local service companies.
FINANCE
Chavez this year paid $1 billion for Banco de Venezuela, a division of Spanish banking conglomerate Grupo Santander, to help him channel state resources. He has said he will nationalize banks that "slip up" by breaking the law, are in trouble, or fail to meet government lending guidelines.
Venezuela is dominated by 10 large banks, including Provincial, owned by Spain's BBVA. Other foreign banks in the country include Citibank. Analysts say Chavez could move against some of the smaller among Venezuela's 45 or so banks if they have solvency or other problems but is unlikely to take on larger ones because of risks to stability and his popularity.
HEAVY INDUSTRY
The government paid $2 billion this year for Argentine-led Ternium SA's stake in Venezuela's largest steel mill. Chavez ordered the nationalization of the cement industry last year, affecting Mexico's Cemex, Switzerland's Holcim and France's Lafarge SA. Last week he ordered the takeover of several large iron smelters.
MINING
Chavez has long toyed with the idea of bringing the mining industry more firmly into state hands. Many basic metals companies have always been government-controlled, but the president wants to extend his reach to gold mining. Venezuela has large and mostly undeveloped gold deposits. In November the mining ministry seized Gold Reserve Inc's Brisas project, which sits on one of Latin America's largest gold veins. Chavez has expressed a wish that Brisas and sister project Las Cristinas be exploited by a government joint venture with Russian companies.
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
In 2007, the Chavez government nationalized the country's largest telecommunications company, CANTV, buying out U.S.-based Verizon Communications Inc's 28.5 percent stake for $572 million. Analysts said Verizon received fair compensation for its assets.
POWER
In the same year, Venezuela expropriated the assets of U.S.-based AES Corp in Electricidad de Caracas, the country's largest private power producer. The government paid AES $740 million for its 82 percent stake. Analysts said the deal was fair for AES.
FARMING
In 2005, Chavez began implementing a 2001 law that lets the state expropriate unproductive farmland or seize farms without proper titles. He has redistributed millions of acres (millions of hectares) deemed as idle in an effort to boost food production and ease rural poverty -- taking over some large farms including a British-run ranch. The government agreed to pay more than $3 million to a group of Spanish farmers for their land. In March, the government took over a eucalyptus plantation owned by Irish cardboard company Smurfit Kappa, citing misuse of the soil.
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