![]() |
| Fuente Web |
Venezuela is now in
a “deeper phase of economic stress,” Moody’s Investor Service
said on Wednesday, according to The Oil and Gas Journal.
Falling oil
production and tough economic sanctions have increased pressures on
the nation’s financial capacity. Mismanagement and underinvestment
in the country’s oil and gas industry is causing defunct facilities
to produce low quality oil that does not meet the requirements of its
usual buyers.
Moody’s sees “a
negative feedback loop between declining production across all
economic sectors, accelerating scarcity of hard currency, and an
economic policy mix defined by price controls and forced discounting
that exacerbate supply shortages and hyperinflation.”
Venezuela’s
production is falling faster that high barrel prices can fill the
revenue gap, the credit rating agency added.
“The fall in
production will only exacerbate cash-flow stress,” Moody’s
research note reads. “While oil prices have rallied in recent
months, the decline in oil production will more than offset the
would-be increase in dollar inflows from oil exports. This has
negative implications for both debt repayment capacity and
Venezuela’s already grim economic outlook.”
Hyperinflation will
continue at the 4000 percent level through 2018 due to the financial
deterioration.
President Nicolas
Maduro is still intent on milking the digital currency fad to help
alleviate the cash shortage and circumvent U.S. sanctions. After
proposing an oil-backed national cryptocurrency called the petro,
Maduro is now calling for an OPEC-wide one that would also include
other large producers.
Speaking to media in
Caracas after a meeting with OPEC's secretary-general Mohammed
Barkindo, Maduro said earlier this week, "I will make an
official proposal to all OPEC members and non-OPEC states to work out
a joint cryptocurrency mechanism backed by oil."
Some 5 billion
barrels of crude have been set aside to back the petro, which would
be priced at $60 a piece, Russian Sputnik reports, adding that the
first batch of petros to be sold will be of 100 million coins. The
price per coin is tied to the price of Venezuelan crude.

No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario