Well, you might find this little tidbit interesting about Petrobras:
As reported at Bloomberg.com, George Soros purchased an $811 million stake in Petroleo Brasileiro SA (PBR), (better known as Petrobras) in Q2. The
Brazilian oil company is now the largest holding in his fund, amounting to 22 percent of the total $3.68 billion of stocks and American depositary
receipts held by Soros Fund Management LLC. Of course, crude oil has taken a dive in the last month, helping to push Petrobras down 28 percent since
his purchase and costing Soros $235 million. I guess we would all like to be in a position to lose nearly a quarter billion dollars and still be
"OK". Then again, if Soros holds tight, he could end up doing well.
While the timing for Soros may not be perfect for this trade, a number of other people are also betting on Petrobras. As quoted by Ricardo Kobayashi
from UBS Pactual SA: "Petrobras has something that other oil companies don't have: oil - lots of it and they're going to find more. If you can buy
now and hang on, if you have the staying power, it's great.''
As written in a previous post , estimates have the Tupi-area fields in Brazil costing between $200-$240 billion to develop, in part due to deepwater
rigs causing $600,000 a day to rent, forcing Petrobras to look for capital. Yet the cost might eventually be worth it given that the offshore fields
are expected to hold up to 50 billion barrels. Petrobras has already leased approximately 80% of the deepest-drilling offshore rigs (see post). The
company is also buying new rigs and production platforms.
If oil prices stabilize, companies to consider would be Transocean (RIG), Nobel (NE), and Nabors (NBR), each of which have sold off with lower crude
prices, but each of which are also near some key support levels. For longer-term investment, some capital-intensive E&P oil companies such as Exxon
Mobil (XOM) should do well, even without direct investment. Of course, this all requires crude oil to stabilize, probably stay over $100 a barrel, and
potentially continue its march higher. If not, you may be experiencing the short-term returns of Soros, and not necessarily the longer-term
ones.
Petrobras: Buy and Sit Tight Like Soros
I'm not sure about this Soros fella. A lot of conservatives accuse him of being a Stalinist or something like that, despite the fact that he helped
fund anti-Communist groups in the Cold War, such as Solidarity in Poland. But his "Quantum Fund" (sounds like a Bond movie) is financed in part by
the Rothschilds, and he does have some rather dubious financial wrangling going on.
Factcheck, on the other hand, pooh-poohs any tie between Obama and Brazilian oil:
Bogus Brazilian Oil Claims