Another
South American country takes its resources into its own hands.
Another
Energy Company Nationalized As Bolivia Follows In Argentina's
Footsteps; More Pain For Spain
1
May, 2012
Two
weeks ago, when commenting
on the (first of many) nationalizations of energy companies (yes, the
collateral shortage we have been discussing over the past year is
particularly in effect when it comes to energy assets, although one
does not need superficially complicated theories to explain it), in
this case of Spanish YPF assets in Argentina we said "How soon
until any and every government follows suit in a world in which
excess liquidity sloshing around makes expropriation of vital energy
producing assets a key prerogative? And how long until the resultant
(accelerating) collapse in faith of the monetary system, leads
government to declare "monetary self-sufficiency" and
confiscate everything that is not nailed down. In exchange for
worthless pieces of paper of course. Just to make it "fair"."
The answer: two weeks. As of a few hours ago, Bolivia has followed in
Argentina's footsteps and has just announced it is nationalizing yet
another Spanish company's domestic assets, in this case Red
Electrica.
From
Bloomberg:
Bolivia
is seizing the local assets of Spain’s Red Electrica Corp. to give
the government control of the Andean nation’s electricity grid.
President
Evo Morales signed the nationalization decree today, Communications
Minister Amanda Davila said in a telephone interview from La Paz. The
Alcobendas, Spain-based company’s investment in its Bolivian unit
was inadequate and the energy industry should be controlled
by the government, Davila said.
As
a reminder...
The
takeover comes two weeks after Argentine President Cristina Fernandez
de Kirchner announced the seizure of oil company YPF SA (YPFD) from
its Madrid-based parent company, citing a lack of investment and the
strategic importance of the industry. Since taking power in January
2006, Morales has seized gas fields, oil refineries, pension funds,
telecommunications companies and a tin smelter in a bid to increase
state control over Bolivia’s industry.
“Energy
is a strategic sector that should subject to government control,”
Davila said. “Red Electrica’s investments were excessively
low.”
An
independent auditor will set compensation to be paid to the Spanish
company, Davila said.
Well,
at least it's not a tribunal like in Argentina.
Finally,
does Bolivia have no fear at all what the "forceful" EU and
Hispanic response to this aggression will be? Guess not: it just may
be that if the troubled country is scrambling to sue everyone else in
the worldfor expropriating its assets it will achieve... nothing?
So
let's see yesterday Aregentina, today Bolivia, tomorrow... the rest
of the world that believes the energy industry should be controlled
by the government?
Luckily,
this news, like every other news, is purely bullish for stocks.
Because the alternative, namely that currency wars are dead and
buried, and at this point it is all about trade wars escalating into
outright trade regime defection, is too preposterous to even
contemplate.
Finally,
we fully expect the same kinds of nationalization that have happened
in the energy area to promptly spread to other commodities most
certainly including precious metals, in the process crushing
efficient supply.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.