CARACAS, Friday August 01, 2008 | Update
People use cash machines at Banco de Venezuela in Caracas last August 1. President Hugo Chávez announced July 31 he would nationalize Banco de Venezuela, which is owned by Spain’s Santander Central Hispano banking group (Photo: Fernando Llano / AP)
July 31
President Chávez announces nationalization of
Banco de Venezuela
Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez reported on July 31
during an obligatory simultaneous broadcast the steps taken
by the government to nationalize Banco de Venezuela, property
of Spanish financial group Santander.
The head of state said that the entity's stakeholders had
no intention to sell the operation in Venezuela, but the government
was interested indeed in buying the institution. As a result,
it would proceed with nationalization.
In the banking sector, rumors were spread about banker Víctor
Vargas, the owner of Banco Occidental de Descuento, having
talks since a few weeks ago to procure the Banco de Venezuela.
However, no agreement had been reached so far. Chávez
confirmed the information.
August 1
Govn't to become the major player in banking sector
In an unequivocal measure to consolidate a model where
the government is the lynchpin of economy, Hugo Chávez
announced the nationalization of Banco de Venezuela, the local
branch of Spanish banking giant Banco Santander.
"I am interested in buying. We are going to nationalize Banco
de Venezuela," said Chávez in a country-wide compulsory
radio and television broadcast.
The Venezuelan Head of State said emphatically that Spain's
Grupo Santander, which bought Banco de Venezuela from the
government in 1996, had agreed to sell the bank. The Spanish
group had asked the Venezuelan government for permission to
sell the bank to a private investor, but Chávez refused
to authorize the operation.
Grupo Santander confirms talks to sell Banco de Venezuela
Spain's Grupo Santander Central Hispano confirmed on
August 1 that it is "holding talks" with the Venezuelan government
regarding the sale of branch Banco de Venezuela.
Grupo Santander explained in a press release that it tried
to sell Banco de Venezuela to a Venezuelan private investor
but the sale did not materialize.
Subsequently, the financial Spanish group became aware that
the Venezuelan government was interested in nationalizing
Banco de Venezuela. Therefore, they decided to hold talks
with Chávez's government.
Meanwhile, the Spanish government said "it would not intervene"
in the operation. Spanish Deputy Prime Minister María
Teresa Fernández de la Vega conceded that Spain's Grupo
Santander was interested in selling its subsidiary in Venezuela,
adding that "there is no particular problem about it," AP
reported.
Venezuelan bonds fall on Banco de Venezuela takeover
move
Venezuelan bonds extended their losses on August 1, after
the government announced it would nationalize Grupo Santander's
subsidiary Banco de Venezuela, in a takeover calculated to
drain over a billion dollars from the country's finances.
On July 31, President Hugo Chávez said he would nationalize
Banco de Venezuela, his latest buy in an oil-funded series
of purchases that has already included crude oil projects
and one telecom firm, along with steel and cement plants,
Reuters reported.
Venezuela's debt returns, calculated on bonds prices and
coupon payments, fell 0.67 percent on Friday, following a
0.33 percent drop on Thursday, according to Morgan's Emerging
Markets Bond Index.
"Venezuela has opened a new front on its quest for
socialism and nationalization with the targeting of Banco
de Venezuela," according to a report published by IDEAglobal.
"We sense that the credit will again lose support."
Ex central bank director questions efficiency following
Banco de Venezuela takeover
The fact that the Venezuelan banking is likely to come
under virtually full state control once the Venezuelan government
purchases Banco de Venezuela from Spain's Grupo Santander
is igniting concerns among customers, said former director
of the Central Bank of Venezuela Domingo Maza Zavala.
"Venezuelans do not have a good opinion of the government
management of the economy, as a whole," Maza Zavala said,
adding that "some people are afraid because the financial
system is the heart of the circulatory system in a country,"
the expert in economic policy said to a group of reporters
after President Hugo Chávez announced the eventual nationalization
of Banco de Venezuela.
This perception stems from the fact that after its recent
nationalization, the oil industry is not managed efficiently
and the same goes for basic industries, and utilities that
have been taken over by the government and "have begun to
tumble," said Maza Zavala.
Central Bank: "Venezuelan financial system is sound
and safe"
The Central Bank of Venezuela (BCV) said on August 1 that
the financial system "is sound and safe," following President
Hugo Chávez's move to take over Banco de Venezuela, the
local branch of Spain's Grupo Santander.
The BCV issued a press release reporting "that the financial
system is sound and safe," adding that it was supplying "enough
liquidity to the financial system, thus ensuring availability
of the means of payment for the normal operation of the economy."
The bank also underlined that "it has enough reserves of
coins and bills to keep the flow of cash in banks, thus providing
the necessary means of payment for production, distribution
and consumption activities within the country."
Chávez amends Banking Law
President Hugo Chávez issued a decree to amend the law
governing the Venezuelan banking and financial system, according
to the Official Gazette published on Friday, a day after he
announced the nationalization of Banco de Venezuela, the branch
of Spain's Grupo Santander in Venezuela.
The reform was declared in the government's Official Gazette
on Friday, but details of the law were not included and a
spokesman said its content would not be published for days,
Reuters reported.
The imminent banking reform was included in a package of
26 laws rushed through in the last hours before the end of
a period of special presidential powers allowing the socialist
leader to write legislation without Congressional approval.
Government, Santander Group start discussing purchase
of Banco de Venezuela
Venezuelan Vice-President Ramón Carrizalez Rengifo
met on July 31 evening with Banco de Venezuela CEO Michel
Goguikian, in addition to Minister of Economy and Finance
Alí Rodríguez Araque, the Vice-President of state-run
oil holding Petróleos de Venezuela (Pdvsa) Asdrúbal
Chávez, Banks Superintendent María Elena Fumero
and the director of Central Bank of Venezuela José Félix
Ribas, to discuss the terms and conditions on procurement
of the financial entity, as announced by President Hugo Chávez.
The news was given in a press release from the Vice-President's
Office, which ratified an announcement made by Minister of
Communication and Information Andrés Izarra.
The communiqué stressed the government decision to buy
Banco de Venezuela, reported state-owned news agency ABN.
Banesco feels that the private sector will prevail in
Venezuelan banks
The private sector "has shown an enormous ability to
compete" in the banking business; therefore, it will keep
a high profile even after the nationalization of Banco de
Venezuela, said on Friday Banesco CEO Juan Carlos Escotet.
"The state has decided to buy a bank that was on sale in
order to compete and have a larger installed capacity, which,
in my opinion, is plausible," said Escotet. "Of course, the
big challenge for the state thereafter will be keeping the
usual high-quality standards characteristic of the Venezuelan
banking sector."
Nationalization should not make an impact on account
holders
Following the announcement made by Venezuelan President
Hugo Chávez on his intention of nationalizing Banco de
Venezuela, the speaker of the National Alliance of Users and
Consumers (Anauco), Roberto León Parilli, said that such
decision should not directly affect domestic stakeholders.
He commented that the measure will not be effective all of
a sudden. Instead, multiple agreements should be first reached
by the government and the owners of Santander Group.
"This should not affect or make a direct impact on customers;
let alone because some weeks ago, it was known that Santander
Group was interested in selling its Venezuelan subsidiary,"
said León Parilli.
04:17 PM. Western Hemisphere. "Damned empire; I curse you one thousand times; some day you will be finished off and wrecked. I curse you one thousand times, empire." This is the least that President Hugo Chávez has uttered to refer to the US government. In urging the Bolivarian Armed Forces to prepare for war, he said that a US raid on Venezuela through Colombia would trigger and spread over the region "the 100-year war."