By Carla Mozee
Major Latin American equity markets were mixed, with one of
Brazil's market heavyweights slumping as oil prices fell, while
Mexican stocks clung to gains after the country posted a rise in
monthly industrial output.
Brazil's Bovespa, tracking the largest stock market in the
region, fell 0.6% to 71,003, and was on track for a second straight
session of losses. The index rose 0.4% last week, and is up 3.5%
this year.
Shares of Petroleo Brasileiro (PBR), the state-run oil giant,
fell 1.6%, following the direction of oil prices on concerns about
a potential increase in stockpiles this week. Crude oil for May
gave up earlier gains to trade down 0.1% to $84.88 a barrel on the
Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange.
Separately, Petrobras' shares were downgraded to market perform
from outperform by Bernstein, according to Briefing.com.
Meanwhile, the company's chief executive, Jose Sergio Gabrielli,
reportedly said on Monday that Petrobras is still planning to sell
new shares before the first half of this year ends. The company
aims to invest up to 250 billion reals in 2011 through 2014 to
develop the pre-salt oil region in offshore Brazil.
Brazilian lawmakers are currently discussing a plan that would
give the government greater control over the country's huge
reserves in exchange for a bigger stake in Petrobras.
The Bovespa was also weighed by losses among steel, utility,
finance and communication stocks.
Mexico's IPC index rose 26 points to 33,867, but was off its
highest levels of the session. Earlier Monday, the country's
statistics agency said industrial output in February rose 4.4%
compared with the year-ago period, the third consecutive month of
increases. Industrial manufacturing climbed 8.8% and mining
activity rose 2.3% while oil output fell 1%.
The reading fell shy of the 4.6% forecast by analysts surveyed
by Dow Jones Newswires. Output rose 0.59% on a seasonally adjusted
basis from January.
In Mexico City, shares of conglomerate Grupo Carso rose 0.7%.
Retail and finance stocks were higher, but shares of miners,
communications firms and some consumer discretionary stocks moved
lower.
The IPC finished at a record high on Friday.
Chile's IPSA slipped 0.1% to 3,838 while Argentina's Merval
edged up 1 point to 2,511.
Among exchange-traded funds, the iShares MSCI Chile Investable
Market Index fund (ECH) fell 0.6%. The iShares MSCI Mexico Index
fund (EWW) slipped fractionally and the iShares MSCI Brazil Index
fund (EWZ) fell 0.7%.