PETROBRAS
E AS AÇÕES JUDICIAIS NOS EUA E NO BRASIL:
UPDATE 5-Petrobras to pay $2.95 bln to
settle U.S. corruption lawsuit [03jan2018]
Source: CNBC; Brendan Pierson
Published 03Jan2018; by Reuters
Acesso Arquivo RAS em 2018-01-03.
NEW YORK, Jan 3 2018 (Reuters) - Brazil's state-controlled oil company
Petroleo Brasileiro S.A. on Wednesday agreed to pay $2.95 billion to settle a
U.S. class action corruption lawsuit, in what was said to be the biggest such
payout in the United States by a foreign entity.
Petrobras denied any wrongdoing
in the deal, which was one of the largest securities class action settlements
in U.S. history. With the settlement, it will pay out more than six times what
it has received so far under a Brazilian probe into bribery schemes that
involved company executives and government officials.
The settlement, smaller than many
analysts anticipated, was an important milestone for the oil firm as it tries
to emerge from the scandal that has entangled two former Brazilian presidents
and dozens of the country's corporate executives.
But the deal reduces chances the
world's most indebted oil company will pay a dividend for 2017, much
anticipated by investors who have not seen such a payment since 2014 when the
scandal came to light, a source familiar with the matter said.
For the last four years Brazil
has been rocked by the so-called Car Wash investigation into kickbacks from
contractors to executives of state-run companies and politicians in return for
public projects.
The settlement put an end to
"extremely high uncertainty" about the company's potential liability,
JPMorgan said in a client note, adding that it had expected a figure above $5
billion.
Analysts at Brazilian bank BTG Pactual said the market had expected a
settlement of $5 billion to $10 billion.
Petrobras preferred shares closed
up nearly 0.91 percent to 16.70 reais. U.S.-traded shares rose 2.52 percent at
$10.97.
Moody's brushed off concerns
about the impact of the fine on the company's balance sheet, noting it was
expected to generate some $30 billion in cash this year and make capital
investments of around $15 billion.
"Petrobras' liquidity
position is adequate and the payment of the agreed class action settlement
amount is not a material concern," it said.
"EXCELLENT RESULT"
Jeremy Lieberman, an attorney for the investors, called the
deal an "excellent result" and said it was the largest ever involving
a foreign securities issuer in the United States.
The deal came as the U.S. Supreme
Court was set to consider on Friday whether to hear Petrobras' appeal of a
lower court decision certifying the case as a class action. Petrobras said it
and the investors would ask the Supreme Court to put off considering the case
while the settlement awaits approval.
If the Supreme Court does take
the case, it could delay its resolution for years.
U.S. District Judge Jed Rakoff in
Manhattan must still approve the accord.
Investors had sued Petrobras
after prosecutors in Brazil accused executives of accepting more than $2
billion in bribes over a decade, mainly from construction and engineering
companies.
In a securities filing on
Wednesday, Petrobras claimed it was a victim and denied wrongdoing, adding that
it has only recovered 1.475 billion reais ($455.77 million) for itself from the
Car Wash investigation.
But its market value has plunged
as its central role in the scheme continues to be unwound by investigators.
Petrobras said it hoped the
settlement would resolve all investor claims in the United States where 13
individual lawsuits remain open, following settlements in 20 other cases.
Some claims involving
non-U.S.-based Petrobras securities purchased outside the United States also
still remain.
The deal came days after Brazil's
securities regulator CVM formally accused eight former Petrobras executives of
corruption.
The accusations relate to
possible irregularities in the contracting process for three drilling ships,
according to a legal filing by the regulator last Friday.
Among the accused in CVM's filing
are former Petrobras Chief Executives Maria das Gracas Foster and Jose Sergio
Gabrielli. Neither could be reached for comment.
The largest securities fraud
settlements in U.S. history include $7.2 billion stemming from the collapse of
Enron, $6.2 billion over an accounting scandal at WorldCom and $3.2 billion
over an accounting scandal at Tyco International, according to Stanford Law
School's Securities Class Action Clearinghouse. ($1 = 3.25 reais)
(Reporting by Brendan Pierson in New York; Additional reporting by Rodrigo Viga Gaier and Marta
Nogueira in Rio de Janeiro, Flavia Bohone in Sao Paulo and Alison Frankel
in New York; Writing by Gram Slattery and Alexandra Alper; Editing by Jeffrey
Benkoe, Andrew Hay and Cynthia Osterman)
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