As he held up crude-covered hands to the throng of photographers gathered on the gleaming, state-of-the-art Petrobras platform, Brazil’s outgoing President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva smiled. He had good news to share sprinkled with superlatives, like most of the headlines coming out of Brazil these days. Not only would the new oil and gas platform soon be producing 180,000 barrels a day but, fresh off its largest global offering ever, Petrobras also has a cool US$132 billion in the bank for future acquisitions. Another day, another real, another triumph and one step closer to Southern Cone dominance. If you’re trying to make sense of the regional power play, Stratfor Global Intelligence has a must-read analysis of Brazil’s hard-fought path to prosperity; recent efforts to seduce buffer states Bolivia, Paraguay and Uruguay; and the unfortunate key ingredient to ultimate Brazilian dominance of the Southern Cone: Argentina’s distraction. The more Argentina gets pulled down by populist-driven policies, macro instability and political uncertainty, Stratfor argues, the more likely Brazil will continue to shore up dominance and influence over the border states and eventually the region as a whole. Growing currency instability and socioeconomic disparity in Brazil are also cited as potential obstacles, but it’s the cross-border opportunism (“Brazil’s ability to capitalise on Argentina’s decline”) that, not unlike the truth, stings the most. With presidential elections still a year away, Argentina will have plenty of time for distractions and Brazil plenty of room for continental influence-wielding in the months ahead.  (Full Story)
If Buenos Aires were a woman, how attractive is she compared to the other municipal babes in Latin America? It might sound like the premise for a really bad reality TV show, but it was actually the focus of a serious study on foreign investment undertaken by a Chilean consulting firm and the research arm of a major Colombian university.
According to Portafolio.com, the Urban Investment Attractiveness Index (UIAI) sought to measure the degree of attractiveness of cities across Latin America based on factors like a.) the ability to attract foreign investment, b.) the quality of climate for foreign investors, c.) the strength of local stock markets, and d.) the prospects for future growth.
And while Buenos Aires wasn’t the first mina chosen by the bachelor, she wasn’t exactly voted off the island in the first round. (That was Venezuela.) In fact, BA came in a respectable fifth place overall in the UIAI survey of 48 cities. BA and fourth-placed Rio de Janeiro were credited with their status as “famous world cities and the strong presence of multinationals.” And Rio wasn’t the only Brazilian cidade feeling the love.
In choosing the #1 city overall, the UIAI said Sao Paulo was the hottest woman at the rose ceremony. The praise, which probably sits as well with Argentines as Time’s selection of Lula today as the world’s most influential leader, was full of superlatives: “Sao Paulo combines the best conditions for foreign investment given the importance of the market, the climate for investors and the diversity of investment options.” Now that’s hot.
For more information about Buenos Aires events and investment opportunities, download IncomeBA and the new issue of InvestBA Privada.






