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The
economic, political and security situation in Venezuela has been frightening for
quite a while, but things continue to grow worse. The new “constituent
assembly,” put together to rewrite the constitution, is seen by most as an
attempt to erode the nation’s democracy and consolidate power in the hands of
the president.
In an
ominous sign, more than a dozen soldiers reportedly attacked a Venezuelan
military base on Sunday, and although the assault was put down, it highlights
the increasing fragility of the state. "The significance lies in whether
this suggests that Maduro is losing his grip on the military and whether we can
expect to see more mutinies to come, or if this is just an isolated incident,”
said Stuart Culverhouse, Global Head of Macro & Fixed Income Research at
Exotix Capital in London. "Details are sparse and it’s probably too early
to say either way at this stage.”
But even if
Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro manages to maintain power and push through
a new constitution that defangs any restraints on his grip, he won’t be able to
outrun the spiraling economic crisis. Perhaps the most visible economic issue
is the debt payments that fall due this year. Venezuela has $5 billion in debt
maturing before the year is out – both in sovereign bonds and in debt payments
by state-owned oil company PDVSA.
That is an
alarming figure given that the government has an estimated $3 billion in cash
reserves, according to S&P Global Ratings, a paltry sum that means a
default in the next few months is more likely than not. Venezuela has
to pay $725 million in debt payments this month, although the problem gets
really serious in October and November, when a combined $3.6 billion in debt
must be paid to bondholders. The value of PDVSA’s bonds has plunged in recent
weeks.
Any
measures from the U.S.
government would likely push Venezuela
over the edge, one reason why the Trump administration has held back for now. But
the U.S. Treasury Department has not taken some sort of embargo or sanctions
policy targeting Venezuela ’s
oil sector off of the table. Venezuela
exports just under 800,000 bpd to the U.S. , which accounts for about half
of the country’s exports. That source of revenue is the only thing keeping the
government going right now.
“There’s a
huge dependency on exports to the United States at a time of profound
economic turbulence. It would be basically cutting off the single most
important source of revenue. It would significantly raise the risks of
default,” Roberto Simon, lead analyst for Latin America
at FTI Consulting, told the WSJ.
The
probability of default within 12 months, based on the value of credit-default
swaps on Venezuelan debt, has an implied rate of 70 percent, according to the
WSJ.
In a sign
that the situation for PDVSA is growing worse, Reuters reports that the oil
company is sending fewer barrels to its U.S.-based refiner, Citgo. The lower
exports come as PVDSA has to send more oil to Russia ’s Rosneft as repayment for a
prior loan the Russian company made. But because those barrels sent to Rosneft
are used as repayment, and aren’t sales, PDVSA will take in less revenue by
reducing shipments to the U.S.
It is hard
to see how Venezuela
avoids a credit event in the next half-year or so. A Venezuelan default might
not lead to contagion in the bond market, even if the value of missed payments
is large – the WSJ says it could be one of the largest in history – because the
Venezuelan economy has grown more isolated in recent years.
However,
the effect on the oil price could be significant. Venezuela produces about 1.9
million barrels of oil per day, a volume that is nearly as large as the global
surplus was at its maximum point during the market downturn in the past three
years. If some significant portion of that goes offline, it would certainly
send oil prices sharply up.
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"The
question is how fast does Venezuela
fail?" Helima Croft of RBC Capital Markets said on CNBC last week. "The
thing is Venezuela
has no capacity to overproduce at this point. Their oil production is going in
one direction and that is down," she said.
"The
national oil company owes $3.5 billion due in October-November. They are
unlikely to make those payments," Croft said. “We really do think a
disorderly default is on the cards for Venezuela ."
A default
might then put some of Venezuela ’s
oil assets in the sights of bondholders, who could try to seize oil cargoes in
lieu of repayment. The end result, one way or another, is likely a decline of
oil exports from Venezuela ,
sending a jolt through the oil market.
Ultimately,
that could push oil prices up to $70 to $80 per barrel later this year, Croft
predicts.
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