Thursday, February 4, 2016

Weatherford To Cut 6,000 Jobs -- February 4, 2016

From Reuters/Rigzone, data points:
  • to cut 6,000 jobs in 1H16
  • had about 56,000 employees at the end of 2014; cut about 14,000 jobs in 2015
  • CAPEX for 2016: $300 million; about 56% lower than its 2015 spending
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Venezuela -- Tick, Tick, Tick

Inflation-wrought Venezuela orders bank notes by the planeload. Government relies on massive imports of bills from foreign printing companies to keep economy going. We're watching a country with world's greatest oil reserves collapse in slow motion. Bernie Sanders should take note. Ayn Rand smiles.
 
Article at WSJ
Millions of pounds of provisions, stuffed into three-dozen 747 cargo planes, arrived here from countries around the world in recent months to service Venezuela’s crippled economy.
But instead of food and medicine, the planes carried another resource that often runs scarce here: bills of Venezuela’s currency, the bolivar.
The shipments were part of the import of at least five billion bank notes that President Nicolás Maduro’s administration authorized over the latter half of 2015 as the government boosts the supply of the country’s increasingly worthless currency, according to seven people familiar with the deals. 
And the Venezuelan government isn’t finished. In December, the central bank began secret negotiations to order 10 billion more bills, five of these people said, which would effectively double the amount of cash in circulation. That order alone is well above the eight billion notes the U.S. Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank each print annually—dollars and euros that unlike bolivars are used world-wide.
Economists say the purchases could exacerbate Venezuela’s economic meltdown: injecting large numbers of freshly printed notes is likely to stoke inflation, which the International Monetary Fund estimates will this year hit 720%, the world’s highest rate.
Central-bank data show Venezuela in 2015 more than doubled monetary liquidity, a measure used to gauge all money in the economy, including bank deposits.
Printing more bolivars is weakening the currency further. This week, the bolivar broke the psychologically important level of 1,000 per dollar for the first time on the country’s thriving black market.
The country has several official exchange rates, including 6.3 bolivars to the dollar. On Wednesday the country’s trade and investment minister, Jesús Faría, called for an overhaul of currency controls. “It’s evident that the current currency regime has exhausted itself,” he said in an interview.
Venezuela’s 30 million people can’t seem to get cash fast enough, said Steve H. Hanke, an expert on troubled currencies at Johns Hopkins University. “People want cash because they want to get rid of it as fast as they can,” he said.
Much, much more at the link.  

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