From the Investor’s Business Daily….
After posting a surplus of 12.5% of GDP this year, and spending at least 4.5% of GDP on a stimulus package of soup kitchen offerings, Chavez is now down to his last $87 billion in reserves, having created nothing of permanent value. Next year, S&P estimates a wild swing into deficit by Venezuela, forcing devaluation.
Venezuelan oil prices are now $34 a barrel. Producing 2.3 million barrels a day, down 16% from 2005, and now consuming 795,000 barrels of that, as Caracas investment banker Miguel Octavio estimated on his blog, “The Devil’s Excrement,” he doesn’t even have enough earnings to finance imports. He’s given away about 424,000 barrels of oil output, and must make do on sales of about 1 million barrels. With oil down, Chavez has entered the worst phase of the oil cycle.
Its kind of funny that those nations who hoped for a sharp drop in America’s fortunes never took any steps to prepare for the very thing they were hoping for. Chavez’s only hope is that America will have a short recession.