Energy

Brazilian Woes Sink Petrobras Stock

PBR-logo
Source: Wikimedia Commons
One might be forgiven for thinking that Petroleo Brasileiro S.A. (NYSE: PBR) needs no help in devaluing the company’s stock price. Petrobras, as it is known, has handled the job quite nicely by itself to this point.

Anyone just tuning in will have missed the bribery and corruption charges leveled against Petrobras that first surfaced last year and resulted last Friday in a court ruling that 54 Brazilian politicians will be added to the corruption investigation. Included in the ruling are the leader of the Brazilian Senate and the head of the nation’s Chamber of Deputies. Both are members of President Dilma Rousseff’s ruling PMDB party. The scandal started when Petrobras executives revealed that they had conspired with politicians to take payments from private-sector contractors in exchange for awarding the contractors with new business.

The impact of the investigations on Petrobras has been devastating. From a peak near $21 in early September, shares have dropped below $6, and there is no near-term end in sight.

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The country’s ills do not stop there. Inflation hit a 10-year high of nearly 8% in February, and the country’s currency has reached a low point against the dollar that it hasn’t touched in more than 10 years, according to the Financial Times.

To complicate the country’s troubles even more, Standard & Poor’s credit rating analysts were in Brazil last week to speak to the country’s new finance minister about the country’s economy. Brazil’s sovereign credit rating is just one notch above junk at S&P, and any lowering would hurt Petrobras in at least a couple of ways.

First, because the company is controlled by the government, Petrobras’s ability to borrow at decent interest rates essentially goes away. The company’s massive offshore capital investments are being severely damaged by low crude oil prices, and its ability to make interest payments will get worse before it improves.

Second, because the government controls the company, it can and often does dictate what Petrobras must pay for things (see scandal, above) and what price it can charge for its products. The country’s high inflation rate and stagnant growth almost certainly add up to pumping more government money into the economy, and if borrowing is too expensive, then a raid on Petrobras may be in order.

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Shares dropped to a new 52-week low of $5.77 early Monday morning. The 52-week high is $20.94, and nearly 44 million of the company’s shares trade hands daily on the New York Stock Exchange.

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