Posted inDaily Brief

Neto Resigns Seat

Valdemar Costa Neto, a deputy in Brazil´s lower house and the head of the
Liberal Party, a member of the governing coalition, resigned his seat after
saying he didn’t declare campaign funds received from President Luiz Inacio
Lula da Silva’s Workers’ Party. He is the first lawmaker to resign in the
two months since congress began probing allegations of government
corruption. Brazil´s Bovespa Index rose 1 percent Monday.

Posted inDaily Brief

Snow in Brazil

US Treasury Secretary John Snow is travelling in Brazil and met with
President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and Finance Minister Antonio Palocci
Monday. This is the third visit of a Bush administration official to the
country since March and comes amid a corruption scandal that threatens to
cut into Lula´s popularity ahead of next year´s presidential election. Snow
declined to make direct comments about the scandal, saying it is a domestic
issue. Addressing generally the subject of corruption in an interview with
a Brazilian TV network last week, Snow said that it hurts democracy,
markets, investor confidence and economic growth.

Posted inDaily Brief

Brazil to Reduce Debt

Brazil´s Treasury Secretary Joaquim Levy said the country will refinance $9 billion of the $11.8 billion of international debt maturing in 2006 and 2007 as part of an effort to reduce the country´s foreign obligations. Brazil sold $6 billion of international bonds as part of its 2005 financing plan and Levy said the government may sell bonds later this year to pre-finance spending plans for 2006.

Posted inDaily Brief

Gol Doubles Plane Order

Brazilian low-cost airline Gol is to double its order for Boeing 737-800s to 60 aircraft and will increase its purchase options to 41. Gol´s revised order increases the size of its total order for Boeing aircraft to 101 from 63. Deliveries are scheduled to take place between 2006 and 2012. Gol – which is planning to establish a low-fare airline in Mexico – says it will use the new 737s for further route expansion in Brazil and South America.

Posted inDaily Brief

Telemar´s Net Rises

Telemar, Brazil´s biggest telephone company, reported net income of $83 million in the second quarter, up 160 percent year-on-year. Chief Executive Ronaldo Iabrudi has more than doubled sales in the last five years by adding data, mobile and long-distance phone services to Telemar’s fixed-line telephone network.

Posted inDaily Brief

Brazil: Lower Growth Forecasted

Brazil´s government lowered its forecast for economic growth this year from 4.0 percent to 3.4 percent. Central bankers raised the benchmark lending rate nine times between last September and April and this month decided to leave it at a 21-month high of 19.75 percent to slow down inflation. The government also increased its year-end inflation forecast to 5.57 percent from 5.1 percent and raised its forecast for this year’s average benchmark interest rate to 19.15 percent from 18.87 percent.

Posted inDaily Brief

Committee Seeks Valerio Imprisonment

The Brazilian congressional committee investigating alleged corruption at the state post office voted 19-1 to jail ad executive Marcos Valerio Fernandes de Souza to prevent him from destroying evidence. Lower house deputy Roberto Jefferson testified on June 14 that Valerio helped the ruling Workers’ Party bribe lawmakers to win their votes in congress and illegally funded campaigns for the ruling coalition and opposition parties. Former Workers´ Party treasurer Delubio Soares quit on July 5 after admitting he sought Valerio as a guarantor of the loans.

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