terça-feira, 4 de agosto de 2009

Ministério reafirma interesse de espanhóis em trem bala Rio-SP

Agência Brasil
04/08/2009
Empresários espanhóis estão dispostos a fazer ofertas competitivas para participar do projeto do Trem de Alta Velocidade (TAV), que deve percorrer os 403 km entre Rio de Janeiro e São Paulo a cerca de 300 km/h, de acordo com o secretário de Assuntos Internacionais do Ministério do Planejamento, Orçamento e Gestão, Alexandre Rosa.
Ele afirmou nesta segunda-feira que esteve em reunião de trabalho, semana passada, na embaixada da Espanha, da qual participaram o ministro espanhol de Assuntos Exteriores e de Cooperação, Miguel Angel Moratinos Cuyaubé, autoridades diplomáticas dos dois países e empresários hispânicos.
Segundo Alexandre Rosa, os empresários espanhóis estão dispostos a participar de todas as etapas do projeto de trem bala, e podem bancar desde os custos de produção e equipamentos ao financiamento e transferência de tecnologia. Ele acrescentou que o governo espanhol já demonstrou "interesse em apoiar os consórcios de seu País nessa empreitada".
O edital de licitação internacional da primeira linha ferroviária de alta velocidade na América Latina nem foi lançado ainda, mas já desperta interesse também de empresas japonesas e francesas, dispostas a participar do projeto, que "é de extrema importância estratégica para o País", de acordo com o secretário.
Ele disse que com a implantação e plena operação do trem bala "o Brasil poderá se tornar detentor de uma tecnologia de ponta que servirá de base para a produção material destinada a futuros projetos semelhantes, em outras regiões do País e do hemisfério".
Não há definição, ainda, de quando a licitação será lançada, mas estimativas iniciais das obras - que incluem construção de linhas, aquisição de trens, desapropriações, medidas socioambientais e implantação dos sistemas necessários - apontam para a geração de cerca de 21 mil empregos diretos.

CPC 27: como contabilizar o ativo imobilizado com o IFRS

Conselho Regional de Contabilidade de Rondônia
04/08/2009
O intuito principal é estabelecer o reconhecimento inicial e a posterior contabilização do ativo imobilizado
Um dos cinco documentos do Comitê de Pronunciamentos Contábeis (CPC)aprovados nesta sexta-feira (31), o de número 27 -"Imobilizado", dá direcionamentos, dentro do IFRS, sobre a contabilização dos ativos imobilizados, de forma a permitir a identificação dos investimentos da empresa e as mutações ocorridas nesses ativos.
Segundo a Comissão de Valores Mobiliários (CVM), o pronunciamento foi elaborado com base no IAS 16 (Property, Plant and Equipment), com o intuito principal de estabelecer o reconhecimento inicial e a posterior contabilização do ativo imobilizado.
Dessa forma, os principais pontos a serem considerados nessa mensuração são o reconhecimento dos ativos, a determinação dos seus valores contábeis e a determinação dos valores de depreciação e perdas por desvalorização a serem reconhecidas.
Principal atenção
Conforme a própria CVM, chama a atenção o tratamento que o pronunciamento dá para a depreciação.
A recente alteração da Lei nº 6.404, de 15 de dezembro de 1976, pela Lei nº 11.638, de 28 de dezembro de 2007, e a Medida Provisória nº 449, de 3 de dezembro de 2008, permitiram uma melhor aderência da prática contábil brasileira às normas internacionais.
Nesse sentido, o pronunciamento traz, de forma mais objetiva, a eventual influência do valor residual do bem na aplicação da depreciação, em especial, quando menciona que "[o] valor depreciável de um ativo é determinado após a dedução de seu valor residual. Na prática, o valor residual de um ativo freqüentemente não é significativo e, por isso, imaterial para o cálculo do valor depreciável".

Bank of America pagará multa de US$ 33 mi por bônus a executivos

Folha Online
04/08/2009
A SEC (Securities and Exchange Commission, a comissão de valores mobiliários americana) multou nesta segunda-feira o Bank of America em US$ 33 milhões por oferecer informações enganosas a investidores sobre os bilhões de dólares pagos em bônus a executivos do Merrill Lynch, após a compra da instituição.
O Bank of America aceitou o acordo mas não admitiu as acusações. A multa está sujeita a aprovação judicial.
Segundo a SEC, a instituição apresentou informações dúbias sobre seus planos de pagar US$ 5,8 bilhões em bônus referentes ao ano fiscal de 2008. Ao invés disso, o banco informou aos acionistas que o Merrill Lynch havia concordado em não pagar bônus de fim de ano por desempenho.
"Falhar em informar que um empresa com problemas vai pagar bilhões de dólares em bônus por desempenho obviamente viola o compromisso [da instituição com os investidores] e justifica a penalidade financeira significativa imposta no acordo de hoje" disse o diretor da divisão se supervisão da SEC, Robert Khuzami, em um comunicado.
Na semana passada, o Bank of America informou que pretende reduzir "modestamente" o tamanho de sua rede nos EUA nos próximos três a cinco anos, mas que seus planos não especificam uma redução de 10% em suas 6,109 agências.
A informação desmente reportagem do diário americano "The Wall Street Journal", publicada também na semana passada, afirmando que o presidente-executivo do banco, Kenneth Lewis, disse a investidores que os planos são de reduzir em 10% o número de agências.
O banco registrou um lucro de US$ 3,22 bilhões no segundo trimestre, divulgado no último dia 17 de julho. O resultado é 5,5% menor que o registrado um ano antes, de US$ 3,41 bilhões, mas superou as expectativas de analistas de mercado.

Brazil auto sales fall 4.9 pct in July - dealers

Mon Aug 3, 2009 4:03pm EDT
SAO PAULO, Aug 3 (Reuters) - New automobile sales in Brazil fell 4.9 percent in July from a record high the previous month, the national dealers' association Fenabrave said on Monday.
Sales of new cars and trucks slipped 0.97 percent from July 2008, to 285,406 units, Fenabrave said.
Brazil is a major market for global automakers such as Italy's Fiat SpA (FIA.MI), Germany's Volkswagen AG (VOWG.DE), and U.S.-based General Motors Co [GM.UL] and Ford Motor Co (F.N).
(Reporting by Vanessa Stelzer; Writing by Todd Benson; Editing by Richard Chang)

Brazil stocks, real close at 2009 highs

Mon Aug 3, 2009 5:08pm EDT
(Updates to close)
SAO PAULO, Aug 3 (Reuters) - Brazil's currency and benchmark stock index both closed on Monday at their strongest levels in almost a year as improved bank earnings in Europe and strong Chinese demand for commodities fueled hopes of a global economic rebound.
The benchmark Bovespa index .BVSP closed up 2.25 percent to 55,997.81, the highest close since Aug. 28, 2008.
Brazil's currency, the real BRBY, ended the day 1.71 percent stronger at 1.834 reais to the dollar, its best since Sept. 25.
"Flows have sent the real higher for a while, but it is the news about the improving global scenario that lifted markets," said Carlos Gandolfo, a partner with Pioneer Corretora de Cambio, one of the largest currency trading houses in Brazil.
Last week, emerging market bond and equity funds had their best and second-best weeks, respectively, in terms of client flows since last August, according to Commerzbank.
Investors committed almost $3 billion in total to equity funds in Asia and Latin America in the period versus $2.5 billion in the preceding week.
One trader, who declined to be identified because he is not authorized by his firm to speak publicly, said part of the gain in the real on Monday was due to the repatriation of some of the $1 billion that state-run power utility Eletrobras (ELET6.SA) raised in a global bond sale last month.
Global equities rose in the wake of encouraging second-quarter results by some big European banks.
Barclays Plc (BARC.L)(BCS.N) reported an 8 percent rise in half-year profit. HSBC Holdings PLC (HSBA.L)(HBC.N) said its first-half profit fell by one-half from a year ago, but the results were better than analysts expected.
"Positive surprises in activity indicators are popping up here and there," said Dalton Gardimam, chief economist for Bradesco Corretora.
Pioneer's Gandolfo said foreign investors' appetite for Brazilian stocks and fixed income will probably push the real as high as 1.8 per dollar by the end of the month. Francisco Carvalho, head of currency trading at Liquidez Corretora, the largest foreign exchange trader in Brazil, expects the currency to trade around the same level.
In stocks, state-controlled energy giant Petrobras (PETR4.SA) rose 3.4 percent to 32.55 reais as oil CLc1 rallied 3 percent on Monday and mining company Vale (VALE5.SA) advanced 2 percent to 33.05 reais. The two stocks have the heaviest weightings in the index.
Benign inflation may pull yields on interest rates futures <0#dij:> down this week, traders said. The yield on the contract due in January 2011 DIJF1 inched up to 9.85 percent from 9.84 percent.
The yield reflects expectations for the level of the benchmark interest rate, the Selic, by the end of 2010. (Reporting by Guillermo Parra-Bernal and Luciana Lopez; Editing by Leslie Adler)

BofA Hit by Fine Over Merrill

Bank Pays SEC $33 Million in Bonus Dispute; Sallie Krawcheck Hired in Shake-Up
The Wall Street Journal
2009/08/04
By DAN FITZPATRICK and KARA SCANNELL
Bank of America Corp. agreed to pay $33 million to settle a civil lawsuit alleging that it misled shareholders about billions of dollars in bonuses promised to Merrill Lynch & Co. employees when it bought the troubled firm at the height of the financial crisis last year.
The takeover of Merrill cost Bank of America Chief Executive Kenneth Lewis his title as chairman and threw his future at the bank into doubt. The 62-year-old Mr. Lewis, trying to hold on as CEO until his planned retirement in about two years, separately launched on Monday a five-way competition to succeed him with a management shake-up that included hiring former Citigroup Inc. Chief Financial Officer Sallie Krawcheck.
Bank of America, the largest U.S. bank in assets, neither admitted nor denied wrongdoing in settling the lawsuit, describing the agreement with the Securities and Exchange Commission as a "constructive conclusion" to the matter. The case reflects the SEC's heightened effort to speed up cases, as new SEC Chairman Mary Schapiro and new enforcement director Robert Khuzami take a harder line with companies and individuals under investigation.
The size of the Merrill bonuses sparked outrage on Main Street and became a symbol of outsized compensation to Wall Street executives who had taken excessive risk but were nevertheless getting bailed out by taxpayers. Bank of America insisted that it hadn't blessed the payments and was pressed by federal regulators into closing the Merrill deal.
The settlement marks a new low point for Mr. Lewis, a man once considered one of the industry's best deal makers. Last December, just before the Merrill deal closed, American Banker named him "Banker of the Year." But by the end of January, Bank of America was sparring with federal regulators over the terms of the Merrill bailout which the bank considered to be too onerous. In April, Mr. Lewis lost his chairmanship as investors blamed him for the decision to buy Merrill despite mounting losses. Many of his backers on the bank's board left amid a regulatory sanction requiring new governance and controls on risk and liquidity management. For John Thain, the former Merrill chairman and CEO ousted by Mr. Lewis shortly after the deal was completed, the settlement offers some measure of vindication. Bank of America had accused Mr. Thain of deciding on his own to pay bonuses to Merrill employees. Mr. Thain had said the bonuses were awarded in consultation with Bank of America. He couldn't be reached for comment Monday.
The SEC complaint, filed Monday in U.S. District Court in New York, found fault with proxy documents that Bank of America and Merrill sent to their respective shareholders in November 2008 to vote on the $50 billion takeover. The SEC said the documents show Merrill wouldn't pay year-end bonuses or other compensation before the deal closed without Bank of America's consent. The bank's view is that the proxy didn't state Merrill bonuses would go unpaid and that it was well known that Merrill had been holding money for year-end awards, according to people familiar with the bank's thinking on the matter.
The SEC complaint said Bank of America had already "contractually authorized" Merrill to pay up to $5.8 billion in bonuses, or 12% of the total deal price. That deal was written in a separate document and was never distributed to shareholders voting on the deal, the complaint said.
On Dec. 5, shareholders of both firms approved the sale. Three days later, Merrill's compensation committee approved $3.6 billion in bonuses. Merrill employees received their bonuses on Dec. 31, one day before the deal closed. Merrill reported a net loss of $27.6 billion for 2008.
The SEC alleges that given the size of the bonuses and Merrill's deteriorating condition, the alleged separate deal was material information investors should have known about at the time of the vote. Bank of America has said that the decision to pay the bonuses was ultimately Merrill's.
State and federal investigators are also probing Bank of America over whether it should have disclosed that Merrill's financial condition had deteriorated as the deal was being finalized. It wasn't until mid-December, more than a week after shareholders approved the merger, that Mr. Lewis told regulators he might pull out of the deal. The U.S. ultimately provided an additional $20 billion to push the deal forward, making Bank of America the second largest recipient of bank bailout funds after Citigroup.
The $33 million payment is steep for disclosure-related cases where fraud isn't alleged. In 2004, Wachovia Corp. agreed to a $37 million settlement of allegations that it didn't sufficiently disclose stock purchases related to a takeover, among other matters. Wachovia didn't admit or deny any wrongdoing.
Mr. Lewis told investors last month that he wants to keep his job until Bank of America repays $45 billion in aid from the U.S. government, adding that he is "the one most capable of getting us to the other side." While the board still is backing him, partly because of the lack of an obvious successor, directors and regulators have been pressing for a stronger list of CEO candidates who will have time to prove themselves, according to people familiar with the situation.
Ms. Krawcheck, 44, is one of the highest-profile outside hires by Mr. Lewis. She led Citigroup's wealth-management group before stepping down late last year following months of tension with Chief Executive Vikram Pandit. The global wealth and investment management unit she will run at Bank of America includes much of the former Merrill.
"I wouldn't be going to Bank of America if I didn't believe these would be winners through the cycle," Ms. Krawcheck said in an interview. "It's clear that as we come out of the recession, there are going to be big opportunities in financial services. These businesses are well-positioned to take advantage of those opportunities."
Mr. Lewis gave expanded duties to newcomer Thomas Montag, the head of global sales and trading at Merrill when it was bought by Bank of America. Mr. Montag, now head of global markets at the giant bank, also will be in charge of global corporate and investment banking.
Mr. Montag ran the part of Merrill that piled up the brunt of the company's $15.31 billion net loss in the fourth quarter, and he was owed a guaranteed payout of $39.4 million for 2008.
At Bank of America, Mr. Montag's global markets business has been one of the best performers through the first two quarters, and he has worked to keep key people in top positions amid a rocky integration of the two firms. There was recent concern that he might leave, which contributed to Mr. Lewis's decision to give him a bigger job, according to one person familiar with the matter. Through a spokesman, Mr. Montag declined to comment.
Mr. Montag and Ms. Krawcheck likely face an uphill battle for the CEO job against longtime Bank of America executives Brian Moynihan, Barbara Desoer and Joe Price. Mr. Moynihan, a lawyer who held the job being taken by Ms. Krawcheck, now will run the huge consumer bank and credit-card business at Bank of America.
The new duties will give Mr. Moynihan experience in nearly every part of Bank of America's business. He joined the bank as part of a 2004 merger with FleetBoston Financial Corp. Ms. Desoer is keeping her current job as president of home loans and insurance, including the former Countrywide Financial Corp., while Mr. Price remains chief financial officer. Through a spokesman, all three declined to comment. The board could also still turn to an outside candidate.
Liam McGee, who ran the bank's consumer and small-business banking unit, is leaving Bank of America, the company said. One person familiar with the discussions said it had become clear to Mr. McGee that he wouldn't become CEO. Mr. McGee couldn't be reached for comment Monday, but a spokesman for the bank said "it was his decision" to leave.
In a statement, Mr. Lewis said the changes bring "new talent...new perspectives" to Bank of America and "also position a number of senior executives to compete to succeed me at the appropriate time."