“Petrobras has no funding problems,” Lobao told reporters today in Sao Paulo....Here's the rest of the story.
Last August we passed along some of George Soros' maneuvering in PBR, his preferred stock won't get diluted. He still has something north of $700 mil in the common:
...HedgeFundNet has a different take on the moves:
Soros Active on Petrobras, EnergyGeorge Soros has cut his stake in Petroleo Brasileiro.Here's some more detail from Bloomberg:
The hedge fund billionaire sold off a chunk of the energy company, his biggest holding, in the second quarter.
A filing showed Soros, head of Soros Fund Management, sold common stock and bought up preferred stock in the company.
The move would indicate that Soros is looking to capitalize on a spread between each type of stock.
The filling with the SEC also showed Soros built his stake in oil company Hess Corp. to a $5.1 million share position.
He also bought up InterOil, Plains Exploration & Production and Suncor Energy.
In addition to cutting his position in Petrobras, Soros decreased his ownership of Potash Corp. and ConocoPhillips.Billionaire George Soros cut his stake in his biggest holding, Petroleo Brasileiro SA, in the second quarter while buying more shares of other energy producers.His New York-based hedge-fund firm, Soros Fund Management LLC, sold 22 million U.S.-listed common shares of Petrobras, as the Brazilian oil company is known, according to a filing today with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Soros bought 5.8 million of the company’s U.S.-traded preferred shares.
Soros is taking advantage of the spread between the two types of U.S.-listed Petrobras shares, said Luis Maizel, president of LM Capital Group LLC, which manages about $4 billion. The common shares were 21 percent more expensive than preferred today, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
“He knows he held a voting right in the common shares that would never translate to actual power,” Maizel said in an interview from San Francisco. “He’s just playing the spread.”
Petrobras preferred shares have also a 10 percent additional dividend, said William Landers, a senior portfolio manager for Latin America at Blackrock Inc.
“Given that there will most likely never be a change in control in the company, I see no reason to pay a higher price for the common shares.” Brazil’s government controls Petrobras and has a majority stake of voting shares....MORE