quarta-feira, 20 de fevereiro de 2013

Bloomberg informa: Eike Batista está tentando levantar US$ 5 bilhões e amplia esforço para vender suas empresas


A matéria abaixo da Bloomberg dá conta de vários assuntos relevantes em relação à situação financeira do Grupo EBX do bilionário Eike Batista.

A primeira é que depois de perder 71% do valor líquido de sua fortuna desde Março de 2012, Eike está tentando levantar US$ 5 bilhões. Para isto está tentando vender a AU (X), empresa voltada para a exploração de ouro, e a MP (X), empresa que opera no setor da energia. 

Esse movimento de tentativa de venda da AU (X) e da MP (X) segue a tentativa frustrada até agora de vender a OS (X). 

As questões abordadas nesta matéria revelam o senso de urgência que está tomando conta de Eike Batista para tentar virar a direção em que a nau do Grupo EBX está tomando. O problema para ele é que seu estilo arrojado que antes era tão celebrado está sendo motivo de poucos grandes investidores se interessarem pelas empresas da franquia "X".


Batista Said to Seek $5 Billion From Stakes Sale


By Cristiane Lucchesi & Juan Pablo Spinetto - Feb 20, 2013 10:31 AM GMT-0300

Eike Batista, the Brazilian billionaire whose estimated net worth has plunged 71 percent since March, is seeking to raise more than $5 billion by selling his AUX gold business and a controlling stake in MPX Energia SA, a person with direct knowledge of the matter said.

EON SE, Germany’s biggest utility, is in discussions to boost its MPX stake to 37 percent from 12 percent and gain effective control as the Brazilian development bank, known as BNDES, increases its holding to 13 percent from 10 percent, said the person, who requested anonymity because the talks are private. Batista also would sell MPX shares to the public in the divestiture, which may raise $2 billion, the person said.

Batista, 56, sold part of holding company EBX Group Co. last year, slowing an expansion into mining and energy in Brazil, Colombia and Chile to focus on raising cash to boost output at existing projects. His oil business, OGX Petroleo e Gas Participacoes SA, cut production targets in June, fueling additional declines at six publicly traded firms he owns. His net worth has plunged to $10.1 billion today from $34.5 billion on March 31, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.

“If the wind doesn’t turn, you have to adjust the sail,” Eric Conrads, who oversees $750 million in Latin American stocks at ING Investment Management, said of Batista’s efforts to liquidate assets. “Moving from exploration to production is not an easy transition. There are a lot of bumps in the road.”
Shares Slide

BNDES would pay about 500 million reais ($256 million) for the additional 3 percent of Rio de Janeiro-based MPX. Batista’s holding, now exceeding 50 percent, would drop to as little as 5 percent, one of the people said.

MPX has dropped 19 percent in the past year through yesterday, outpacing the 13 percent decline for the benchmark Bovespa index. The stock declined 1.5 percent to 10.51 reais at 10:30 a.m. in Sao Paulo.

Batista’s aim to sell all of AUX reflects a change from last year, when he disclosed plans to sell a 49 percent stake in the gold business, two people said. Vancouver-based Goldcorp Inc., the world’s second-biggest miner of the precious metal by market value, entered the talks for AUX after an agreement to negotiate exclusively with Qatar’s government expired in October, the people said.

The pace of negotiations for AUX has slowed and a deal may not happen, one of the people said.

EBX, which holds most of Batista’s assets, declined to comment, as did representatives of Dusseldorf-based EON, Goldcorp, BNDES and Qatar Investment Authority, the Persian Gulf nation’s sovereign-wealth fund.

Batista also had sought to sell shipbuilder OSX Brasil SA to Sete Brasil Participacoes SA in exchange for a stake in the oil-rig contractor, according to two people with direct knowledge of the matter. He eventually gave up on the idea, Folha de S. Paulo reported in October, citing an interview with Batista.

“Brazil is not really in favor these days,” said ING’s Conrads. “People are not looking for exposure.”