Shell cuts stake in Brazil oil project with $1 billion sale to Qatar

http://www.globalnewsnetwork.tk/2014/01/shell-cuts-stake-in-brazil-oil-project.html
A Shell logo is seen at a petrol station in London January 31, 2013.
(GNN) - Oil firm Royal Dutch Shell (RDSa.L) is selling a stake in a Brazilian oil project to Qatar Petroleum International (QPI) for $1 billion, in line with this year's plan to ramp up disposals.

Shell said on Wednesday it was selling 23 percent of the Parque das Conchas or BC-10 project off the coast of Brazil, leaving it with a 50 percent interest. It will continue to operate the 50,000 barrels of oil per day project.

Earlier in January Shell sold a stake in a gas project in Western Australia for $1.14 billion as part of its drive to improve return on investment, days after it had issued a shock profit warning for the fourth quarter.

Analysts and shareholders said the company's weak results would push the world's number-three investor-controlled energy firm to keep a tighter control on costs after it said 2013 capital expenditure would peak at about $45 billion.

Shell had already said last October that it would significantly step up disposals in 2014 to keep cash flowing in.

Recent media reports have suggested the company's divestments could total $15 billion this year, equivalent to around 6.5 percent of its $228 billion market capitalization.

QPI, the global arm of Qatar Petroleum, which is the world's largest liquefied natural gas exporter, has to date undertaken only limited expansion overseas but the Gulf state's energy minister told Reuters in October that QPI wants to expand its reach.

Shell, which said the Brazilian disposal was subject to regulatory approval by that country's authorities, is due to release its fourth-quarter results on Thursday.

Shares in the company closed at 2,123.5 pence on Tuesday.(GNN)(Reuters)(GNN INT)

(Reporting by Sarah Young; editing by Kate Holton and Paul Sandle)

Russia to await new Ukraine government before fully implementing rescue: Putin

http://www.globalnewsnetwork.tk/2014/01/russia-to-await-new-ukraine-government.html
Interior Ministry members stand guard at the site of clashes with anti-government protesters in Kiev January 29, 2014.
(GNN) - President Vladimir Putin raised the pressure on Ukraine on Wednesday, saying Russia would wait until it forms a new government before fully implementing a $15 billion bailout deal that Kiev urgently needs.

Putin repeated a promise to honor the lifeline agreement with Ukraine in full, but left open the timing of the next aid installment as Kiev struggles to calm more than two months of turmoil since President Victor Yanukovich walked away from a treaty with the European Union.

A day after Prime Minister Mykola Azarov resigned on Tuesday, hoping to appease the opposition and street protesters, Russia tightened border checks on imports from Ukraine in what looked like a reminder to Yanukovich not to install a government that tilts policy back towards the West.

Ukraine's new interim prime minister promised to try to limit the economic damage inflicted by the sometimes violent street protests, and said he expected Russia to disburse a further $2 billion aid installment "very soon".

Putin had less of a sense of urgency. "I would ask the (Russian) government to fulfill all our financial agreements in full," he said, repeating a promise made on Tuesday after the government resigned in Kiev.

However, he signaled that the latest installment was on hold in remarks he made during a meeting with senior government officials, extracts of which were broadcast later on Russian TV.

"Let's wait for the formation of a Ukrainian government," he said, before telling the meeting, "But I ask you, even in the current situation, not to lose contact with our (Ukrainian) colleagues," adding that discussions should continue before a new government is formed.

Putin agreed to the aid package with Ukraine in December, throwing the ex-Soviet state a lifeline in what the opposition and the West regard as a reward for scrapping plans to sign political and trade deals with the EU and promising to improve ties with Russia.

WESTERN ALARM

Alarm about Ukraine is growing in the West. German Chancellor Angela Merkel telephoned Putin and Yanukovich on Wednesday, urging a constructive dialogue between the government and opposition in Kiev. "The situation must not be allowed to spiral again into violence," a German government spokesman quoted her as saying.

NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen was more forthright, blaming Russia for Kiev's failure to sign the EU deals. "An association pact with Ukraine would have been a major boost to Euro-Atlantic security, I truly regret that it could not be done," he told the French newspaper le Figaro. "The reason is well-known: pressure that Russia exerts on Kiev.

U.S. congressional aides said on Wednesday that President Barack Obama's administration was preparing financial sanctions that could be imposed on Ukrainian officials and protest leaders if violence escalates in the political crisis gripping the country.

Obama referred to Ukraine in his State of the Union address on Tuesday, voicing support for the principle that all people have the right to free expression

Lawmakers loyal to Yanukovich offered an amnesty to people detained in anti-government protests - but only if activists first vacate occupied public buildings in Kiev and elsewhere, a condition they previously rejected.

Ukraine badly needs the Russian money. Figures compiled by UniCredit bank before the bailout put its gross external financing requirements at $3.8 billion in the first three months of this year alone, including $2.29 billion for gas that is covered by the deal with Moscow.

That rises to $5.5 billion in April-June, including repaying a $1 billion bond that matures then. Altogether, the government would need $17.44 billion this year to pay its foreign bills, including for Russian gas.

The EU's foreign policy chief, Catherine Ashton, called for sincere discussion during Ukraine's crisis. "The dialogue which has happened from time to time needs to become a real dialogue. We hope to see real progress in these coming days. Time is really of the essence," she said after meeting Yanukovich.

RUSSIAN CHECKS

In an apparent sign of further pressure from Moscow, the Ukrainian association of producers said Russia had started extra border checks, backed by demands for increased duties, on cargoes of food and machinery being shipped into the country by road and rail.

Russia took similar action in August in what was seen as part of Moscow's campaign to dissuade its neighbor from signing the association and trade agreements with the EU.

Ukraine has been gripped by mass unrest since Yanukovich walked away from the EU deals last November.

Leonid Kravchuk, the first president of independent Ukraine, stressed the depth of the crisis on Wednesday.

"The state is on the brink of civil war. We must call what is happening by its proper name. What is happening is revolution because we are talking about an attempt to bring about a change of power," he told parliament.

With Yanukovich and loyalist deputies in parliament now making concessions to defuse the crisis and with Azarov, a Russian-born hardliner, gone there had been speculation that Moscow might slow or even halt the stream of aid.

But acting Prime Minister Serhiy Arbuzov appeared to have been cheered by Putin's promise on Tuesday to extend the $15 billion in credits and cheaper gas.

"We have already received the first tranche of $3 billion and expect to receive the second tranche of $2 billion very soon," he said, chairing his first Cabinet meeting. Russia is offering the funds by buying Ukrainian government bonds.

BACK-ROOM TALKS

In Kiev, opposition deputies and Yanukovich loyalists were in back-room talks on Wednesday over the wording of a draft law under which protesters detained by police would get amnesties.

In an unusual move, Yanukovich himself went to parliament to intervene in the debate. There was no immediate response from protesters to the late-night passing of a law that would amnesty detainees if occupied buildings were first cleared. The opposition in parliament had abstained on the vote.

Although the unrest began because of Yanukovich's U-turn on policy towards Europe, it has since turned into a mass demonstration, punctuated by violent clashes between radical protesters and police, against perceived misrule and corruption under Yanukovich's leadership.

Several hundred people camp round-the-clock on Kiev's Independence Square and along an adjoining thoroughfare, while more radical activists confront police lines at Dynamo football stadium a few hundred meters away.

Anti-Yanukovich activists have also stormed into municipal buildings in many other cities across the sprawling country of 46 million. Hundreds of protesters in Kiev have occupied City Hall and the main agriculture ministry building.

Opposition leaders, including world champion boxer-turned-politician Vitaly Klitschko, have resisted demands by Yanukovich's Regions Party for barricades to be removed from roads and for protesters to leave occupied buildings as a pre-condition for an amnesty for detained activists.

Klitschko, in a comment that also highlighted the tenuous control the opposition leaders have over sections of the protest movement, said, "For us to simply say to people 'You have done your job, now go home' is now not possible."

In a big concession to the opposition and the protest movement, pro-Yanukovich deputies voted on Tuesday to repeal a series of sweeping anti-protest laws they brought in hastily on January 16 in response to increasingly violent clashes.

But opposition leaders, who also include former Economy Minister Arseny Yatsenyuk and nationalist Oleh Tyahnibok, have won a mandate from protesters on the streets to continue to press for further gains from Yanukovich.

The opposition also wants a return to the previous constitution, which would represent another significant concession since it would reduce Yanukovich's powers.

Speculation that Russia might cut the financial lifeline it has offered prompted the Standard & Poor's agency to cut Ukraine's credit rating to CCC+ on Tuesday.

Arbuzov said the central bank was ensuring stability on the financial markets and he made no mention of any changes to his predecessor's policy of keeping the hryvnia currency pegged close to the dollar and maintaining subsidies for domestic gas - both criticized by the International Monetary Fund.

(This version of the story corrects typos in name of former prime minister Mykola Azarov in paragraph 3, and Anders Fogh Rasmussen in paragraph 10)(GNN)(Reuters)(GNN INT)

(Additional reporting by Natalia Zinets and Pavel Polityuk in Kiev, Thomas Grove in Moscow, Nicholas Vinocur in Paris, and Patricia Zengerle in Washington)

(Writing by Richard Balmforth and Jack Stubbs; Editing by David Stamp, Alastair Macdonald and Peter Cooney)

Russia says identifies bombers, arrests two in Volgograd blasts

http://www.globalnewsnetwork.tk/2014/01/russia-says-identifies-bombers-arrests.html
A bus, destroyed in an earlier explosion, is towed away in Volgograd December 30, 2013.
(GNN) - Russia has identified two suicide bombers responsible for attacks that killed 34 people in the city of Volgograd last month and arrested two suspected accomplices in the violence-torn Dagestan province, officials said on Thursday.

The National Anti-Terrorism Committee said the bombers, whose attacks raised fears of further violence before the Sochi Winter Olympics next week, were members of a militant group in Dagestan in the restive North Caucasus in southern Russia.

A bombing at the railway station in Volgograd on December 29 was followed a day later by a blast that ripped apart a trolleybus in the city 700 km (400 miles) northeast of Sochi, where the Olympics start on February 7.

The blasts were the deadliest attacks in Russia outside the North Caucasus, the cradle of an Islamist insurgency whose leader has urged fighters to prevent the Olympics going ahead, since a bomber killed 37 people at a Moscow airport in 2011.

The head of security for the Olympics issued Russia's latest assurance about security at the Sochi Games, a major prestige project for President Vladimir Putin, saying there was "no concrete threat".

The Anti-Terrorism Committee identified the Volgograd bombers as Asker Samedov and Suleiman Magomedov, called them members of the "Buinaksk Terrorist Group" and said it had known their names for some time. Buinaksk is a city in Dagestan.

Two brothers suspected of helping send the bombers to Volgograd were detained in Dagestan on Wednesday, the committee also said. It identified them as Magomednabi and Tagir Batirov and said the investigation was continuing.

Investigators initially said a woman was suspected of carrying out the railway station bombing.

A video posted on the Internet last week by a group identifying itself as Vilayat Dagestan featured what it said were the Volgograd bombers donning explosive belts and warning Putin to expect a "present" at the Olympics.

PUTIN UNABLE TO CRUSH INSURGENCY

The video named the men only as Suleiman and Abdulrakhman, and it was not immediately clear if either of them was one of the men identified by the National Anti-Terrorism Committee as the suicide bombers.

Buinaksk is the site of the first of four deadly apartment building bombings in September 1999 that were a catalyst of Russia's second post-Soviet war against separatists in Chechnya, adjacent to Dagestan.

As prime minister at the time, Putin headed up the war, which helped shape his image as a strong leader and ensure his election the following year after Boris Yeltsin resigned and made him acting president.

But Putin, in power as president or prime minister ever since, has been unable to end attacks by Islamist militants from Dagestan and other mostly Muslim provinces of the North Caucasus, where the insurgency stems from the wars in Chechnya.

The leader of the insurgency, Chechen militant Doku Umarov, called on insurgents in a web-posted video in July to use "maximum force" to prevent the Olympics, a huge undertaking that will help shape Putin's legacy, from being held.

Putin and other Russian officials have assured athletes and visitors that they will be safe in Sochi.

"Not only our information, but the information of our partners ... shows that at the current time, there is no concrete threat to the Games," Alexei Lavrishchev, a senior Federal Security Service officer, said in Sochi on Thursday.

Asked about Dagestan during a news conference, he said it is "pretty far way" from Sochi and added: "The current situation in Dagestan is under control."

Dagestan, on the Caspian Sea about 570 km (350 miles) southeast of Sochi, is beset by near-daily violence linked to the insurgency.(GNN)(Reuters)(GNN INT)

(Additional reporting by Piotr Pilat in Sochi; Editing by Mark Heinrich)

EU, Russia to swap recriminations over Ukraine

http://www.globalnewsnetwork.tk/2014/01/eu-russia-to-swap-recriminations-over.html
Russian President Vladimir Putin (C), European Council President Herman Van Rompuy (L) and European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso attend a news conference after the European Union-Russian Federation (EU-Russia) Summit in Yekaterinburg June 4, 2013.
European Union and Russian leaders will trade recriminations over Ukraine at a summit on Tuesday, as the former Soviet republic reels from violent unrest after spurning the EU's embrace and lurching back towards Moscow.

Russian President Vladimir Putin travels to Brussels for talks with EU leaders at a time when relations are strained over Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovich's decision in November to turn his back on a trade and political agreement with the EU in favour of closer trade ties with Russia.

That decision, rewarded with a $15 billion bailout from Russia, sparked weeks of pro-EU demonstrations in Kiev which three protesters have been killed.

Police clashed with protesters in the Ukrainian capital again on Sunday and the opposition said it would keep pushing for early elections, despite being offered the prime minister's post by Yanukovich.

The 28-nation EU, which accuses Russia of putting trade pressure on Ukraine and other ex-Soviet states tempted by closer ties with Brussels, showed its anger by cancelling the dinner that traditionally precedes its twice-yearly summits with Russia.

It has opted instead for an intensive two-and-a-half-hour session of talks, restricted to top officials, to permit an in-depth discussion about Ukraine and other divisive issues.

Putin and Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov will represent Russia while European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso, European Council President Herman Van Rompuy and EU foreign policy chief Catherine Asthon will speak for the EU.

Russia, which regards Ukraine as part of its sphere of influence, has told European governments to stop meddling in the Ukrainian crisis and has criticised politicians such as Ashton for visiting protest sites in Kiev.

Russia and the EU have had "a number of differences which need to be discussed and clarified" at the summit, Van Rompuy said in a statement.

The EU's strategy of forging closer ties with ex-Soviet states was left in tatters when Armenia opted last September to join a customs union led by Moscow. Ukraine was next to jilt the EU, after Moscow tightened checks on its imports and threatened to cut off its gas supplies.

Van Rompuy and Barroso will stress to Putin that "there shouldn't be any interference or threats" and that Ukraine and other ex-Soviet states should be free to take their own decisions, one EU source said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

CIVIL WAR

A German member of the European Parliament, Knut Fleckenstein, urged the EU and Russia to work together to foster a dialogue in Ukraine.

"If they do not want Ukraine to slide into a kind of civil war, they must work for a dialogue between the Ukrainian government and the opposition. Russia and the EU can solve this issue together, but not alone," Fleckenstein, a leader of a joint committee with Russian legislators, told Reuters.

But the EU source said that, while both sides were likely to call for an end to violence in Ukraine, no joint statement would be issued after the meeting.

The EU has launched its own mediation effort in Ukraine, sending enlargement commissioner Stefan Fuele for talks last week and Ashton later this week.

"This is not going to be a summit about Ukraine ... (But) of course the dramatic developments there are undoubtedly a source of serious concern for both Russia and the EU," Russia's ambassador to the EU, Vladimir Chizhov, said last week.

Russia is the EU's third-biggest trading partner after the United States and China, and two-way trade totalled more than 330 billion euros ($452 billion) in 2012. But the two sides are locked in quarrels over trade and energy which could be raised in Tuesday's talks.

The EU has launched a World Trade Organization dispute with Russia over allegations it illegally protects its carmakers, and has opened an anti-trust probe of Russian energy giant Gazprom. The Syrian conflict and negotiations with Iran on its nuclear programme will also be raised at the summit.(GNN)(Reuters)(GNN INT)

(Additional reporting by Tom Koerkemeier; Editing by Mark Trevelyan)

Hungary soon to clinch Russian loan for nuclear plant project

http://www.globalnewsnetwork.tk/2014/01/hungary-soon-to-clinch-russian-loan-for.html
Russia's President Vladimir Putin (R) and Hungary's Prime Minister Viktor Orban attend a meeting at the Novo-Ogaryovo state residence outside Moscow January 14, 2014.
Hungary's development minister said on Sunday the government should soon complete talks with Russia on a multi-billion dollar sovereign loan that would enable it to start work on two new nuclear reactors.

Russian President Vladimir Putin and Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban signed an agreement earlier this month on a project to add 2.4 gigawatts of nuclear generation capacity at the Paks nuclear plant, more than doubling Hungary's current level.

The two nations agreed on several aspects of the project, but the financing was left open.

Minister Zsuzsanna Nemeth told national news agency MTI in an interview that she hoped the loan agreement would be wrapped up fairly quickly and that experts can begin coordinating technical details soon.

She did not elaborate, and MTI did not quote her words directly.

Janos Lazar, Orban's chief of staff, said when the deal was agreed that Russia would provide up to 10 billion euros ($13.7 billion) in a sovereign loan, which would cover up to 80 percent of the costs, and that Hungary would put up the other 20 percent later as the money is needed.

Lazar said the 30-year loan would have a roughly 10-year grace period during construction and then a 20-year repayment period.

Russian nuclear builder Rosatom could start hiring for the project this year and employ 1,500 people by the end of 2015, he said.

Neither Lazar nor Nemeth explained how state-owned energy wholesaler MVM, which owns and operates the Paks plant, would figure in the expansion, nor the precise effect the project would have on the government budget, saying only that it would stick to its goal of cutting debt each year.

The Paks expansion is expected to become a hot topic as Orban's center-right Fidesz party seeks reelection for a new four-year term in April. Leftist opposition leader Attila Mesterhazy, who questions the deal's link to Russia, said on Saturday his party would make it the subject of a referendum.

Fidesz has a comfortable lead over its opposition rivals, recent polls have shown, but about a third of the electorate remains undecided.

Russia and Hungary have agreed that Hungarian subcontractors will get a 40 percent share of the work. Nemeth said Budapest would direct 60 percent of its development funds from the European Union in budget years 2014-2020 to improving the technical capabilities and production capacity of local companies so they can participate in the Paks expansion.

Paks currently generates about 2 gigawatts of electricity from four Russian-made VVER type reactors that were brought online in the 1980s, covering about 40 percent of Hungary's power consumption.

The four blocks are in various stages of obtaining the safety checks and paperwork necessary to extend their original 30-year lifetimes for another 20 years.(GNN)(Reuters)(GNN INT)

(Reporting by Marton Dunai; editing by Jane Baird)

Tiger Global to invest up to $500 million in Brazil online retailer B2W

Tiger Global Management LLC, the hedge fund managed by industry mogul Charles Coleman, plans to spend up to 1.2 billion reais ($500 million) to buy a stake in Brazilian online retailer B2W Companhia Digital (BTOW3.SA), in a bet that e-commerce will keep booming in Latin America's largest economy.

Brazilian retailer Lojas Americanas SA (LAME4.SA), B2W's largest shareholder with a 62.2 percent stake, and two funds overseen by Tiger Global will jointly inject 2.38 billion reais into B2W, according to a late Friday securities filing. Tiger and Lojas agreed to subscribe to 95.2 million of B2W shares at 25 reais each, 61 percent above the stock's Friday closing price.

Lojas Americanas, Brazil's No. 1 discount retailer, agreed to purchase a minimum 1.021 billion reais of new shares in B2W while Tiger Global will purchase between 459.2 million reais and 1.2 billion reais worth of B2W stock, the filing said. At the end of the transaction, which requires regulatory approval, Lojas Americanas will remain B2W's top shareholder.

In recent years, Tiger Global has taken advantage of rapid growth in online commerce retail operations in Brazil and China, the world's two largest emerging market economies. Some of Tiger Global's investments in Brazil include online sports retail company Netshoes, Groupon Inc (GRPN.O) rival Peixe Urbano, and social game developer Vostu.

Coleman, 38, is one of the so-called "Tiger Cubs" - asset managers whose start was sponsored by hedge fund industry legend Julian Robertson. Coleman, a former technology analyst for Robertson's Tiger Management, has built Tiger Global into a firm with over $11 billion in assets under management, chiefly by his prowess in investing in internet companies before they sell shares to the public.

While Brazil's e-commerce market is expected to grow an average 18 percent annually by 2016, according to several consulting firms including E-bit and A.T. Kearney, some issues linger for online retailers. B2W, the largest Brazilian online retailer, has struggled over the past two years as a result of intense competition, eroding profitability and onerous upfront investment in technology to build up scale and improve customer service.

Shares of B2W are down 4.4 percent over the past 12 months.

With local interest rates at their highest level in about two years, household leverage peaking and persistently high inflation eating up disposable income, Brazil's leading online retailers are likely to post a net loss this year, according to Irma Sgarz, a Goldman Sachs Group retail analyst in Brazil.

Investors may react positively to the capital plan "since the subscription price was set at a large premium to B2W's current share price, avoiding dilution," said Marcel Moraes, a retail analyst with Deutsche Bank Securities. "On top of that, it should also reduce the concern over credit risk."

Minority shareholders should be granted preemptive rights. Those not participating could have their stakes diluted by about 38 percent, the filing noted.(GNN)(Reuters)(GNN INT)

(Editing by Rosalind Russell)