.
May 16, 2008
SouthAmerica: I am glad that my cousinâs bank is doing so well; as a matter of fact his father Olavo Egydio Setubal had been doing a great job with Banco Itau for a long time.
We are both direct descendants of the Barao de Souza Queiroz.
The Barao of Souza Queiroz it was my great/great/grandfather and he was also the great/great/grandfather of Olavo Egydio Setubal.
The Barao of Souza Queiroz had 13 children and Olavo Egydio Setubal is a direct descendant of the oldest son of the Barao: Francisco Antonio de Souza Queiroz Filho. (Child # 1)
I am a direct descendant of the youngest son of the Barao of Souza Queiroz: Carlos de Souza Queiroz. (child # 13)
My great-grandfather Carlos de Souza Queiroz married Maria Flora de Andrada e Silva de Souza Queiroz â that marriage united the 2 most influential families in Brazilian history â The âAndrada e Silvaâ Family and The âSouza Queirozâ Family.
The Barao of Souza Queiroz was the major shareholder of Banco Comercio Industria which was a major bank in Brazil for a long time, but I donât remember what happened to that bank.
All I can say to my cousin Roberto Egydio Setubal is: Keep up the good work since our family is proud of having outstanding family members such as you and your father.
******
âSetubal Sees Brazil in `Transformation' as Growth Lures Fundsâ
By Telma Marotto and Adriana Arai
Bloomberg News â May 16, 2008
May 16 (Bloomberg) -- Banco Itau Holding Financeira SA's Roberto Egydio Setubal, head of Brazil's second-biggest non- government bank, said his nation is in a ``transformation'' that's creating the best conditions for business he's ever seen.
Brazil, Latin America's largest economy, has broken a cycle of boom and bust because of rising commodity exports and will enjoy sustainable annual growth of 4 percent to 5 percent, Setubal said in an interview this week in Sao Paulo. An investment-grade rating granted by Standard & Poor's last month will make Brazil a magnet for foreign investors, he said.
Setubal is expanding abroad and at home, capitalizing on the 31 percent rise in Brazil's real against the dollar since May 2006, the collapse of inflation from almost 5,000 percent in 1994 to 5 percent now, and losses at global competitors. He's opening offices in the Middle East and Asia, hiring bankers from Deutsche Bank AG and Merrill Lynch & Co. and looking to buy Brazilian assets that may get dumped by foreign firms at discount prices.
``I don't see Brazil going back,'' the 53-year-old chief executive officer said at his office in Sao Paulo. ``The strong currency and investment grade are here to stay.''
Brazil, the biggest debtor among emerging markets for decades, became a net foreign creditor in January after international reserves surged to a record $195.8 billion. Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, president since 2003, bolstered confidence in the nation by reducing the budget deficit and allowing the central bank to operate independently, Setubal said.
`Biggest Opportunities'
``Brazil in coming years will enjoy growth in financial instruments much higher than any other country that I'm able to be in,'' said Setubal, a member of the International Advisory Committee of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. ``The biggest opportunities for Itau are in Brazil.''
Itau plans to expand its network of 2,782 branches by 140 in Brazil this year, and add 5,000 workers to the staff of 66,442, senior managing director Silvio Carvalho said in a Bloomberg Television interview on May 6.
Led by Setubal, who became CEO in 1994, Itau has returned better than 1,300 percent with dividends during the past decade in Sao Paulo trading, more than double the Bovespa index and outpacing the 1,092 percent total return of Banco Bradesco SA, Brazil's largest non-government bank by assets. Government- controlled Banco do Brasil SA, Latin America's largest bank by assets, advanced 771 percent.
Brazil's $1.07 trillion economy grew 5.4 percent in 2007, the fastest in three years. Controlled inflation led the central bank to cut the benchmark interest rate to as low as 11.25 percent in September, encouraging people and companies to borrow record amounts and boosting profit at Brazilian banks.
Lending has increased every month since February 2004 to 992.7 billion reais ($600.8 billion) in March.
`Transformation'
``The transformation that we have gone through in the past 10 years is very solid,'' Setubal said.
The company's net income almost doubled in 2007 to 8.47 billion reais from the previous year, compared with a 58 percent rise in Bradesco's profit to 8.01 billion reais.
Itau is taking advantage of losses in mortgage and collateralized debt markets that weakened international peers, Setubal said. International banks and securities companies have raised about $260 billion of capital since July, after writedowns and credit losses of at least $342 billion.
``We were lucky about this crisis, because it gave us time to develop our business'' while competitors were reeling, Setubal said. ``Today I'm building up my business, hiring good people in the market, developing my franchise.''
Poaching Talent
Itau hired 196 people in the past year for its investment banking unit Itau BBA SA, Brazil's largest wholesale bank, including Alexandre Aoude, former head of Deutsche Bank's Brazilian unit. The workforce at Itau BBA increased to 1,026 at the end of April from 830 people a year earlier, according to the bank.
Brazil was the third-biggest market for initial public offerings globally in 2007, according to Bloomberg data. This year, only three companies went public, reflecting the reduced appetite for risk by international investors. Setubal said ``the worst moment is behind us'' and he expects IPOs in Brazil to rebound during the second half of the year.
Lack of investment in roads, ports and energy could put the economic expansion at risk, said Sergio Goldenstein, the former head of open-market operations at the Brazilian central bank.
A second risk to Brazil's bonanza is inflation, said Goldenstein, now at Rio de Janeiro-based BNY Mellon ARX, which manages about 9 billion reais.
The central bank last month raised its benchmark rate for the first time in three years after inflation reached a two-year high of 5 percent.
Higher interest rates won't deter the economy from growing and the monetary policy makers' action was another sign of the government's commitment to sound economic policies, Setubal said.
``This is part of making this scenario possible,'' he said. ``This is part of the process that we will enjoy in coming years.''
Source:
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=axr5CzbmE9ak&refer=home
.