Petrobras slashes diesel prices to ease Brazil trucker protest

In This Article:

* Diesel price cut by 10 pct, frozen for 15 days

* Petrobras CEO denies government interference

* New York-listed shares down 7.5 pct after close (Adds lower house vote on plan to resolve strike, paragraphs 9-10)

By Alexandra Alper and Maria Carolina Marcello

RIO DE JANEIRO/BRASILIA, May 23 (Reuters) - Brazil's state-led oil company Petrobras on Wednesday temporarily cut diesel prices by 10 percent in order to help the government and truck drivers resolve a protest crippling highways.

The surprise decision, aimed at resolving a standoff threatening grains exports, industrial output and even fuel supply at airports and gas stations, will bring immediate relief for angry truckers but raise investor concerns about government interference at Petroleo Brasileiro SA.

New York-listed shares of Petrobras fell as much as 7.5 percent in after-market trading, after closing 3.8 percent lower on Wednesday.

Petrobras Chief Executive Officer Pedro Parente said the price cut, which will only remain in place for 15 days and cost the company about 350 million reais ($96 million), had not been demanded by the government.

"The independence of Petrobras has not been damaged," Parente said at a news conference explaining the decision. "It was an exceptional measure and does not represent a change to our pricing policy."

Near-daily price adjustments at Petrobras have let the company track global prices and turn a profit on fuel sales after losing money for years at the government's insistence — part of a turnaround that lifted shares nearly 90 percent since the pricing policy started last July.

While Petrobras' price cut brings momentary relief to truckers, policymakers struggled to reach a more lasting accord during talks with the drivers' representatives in Brasilia, who threatened to extend their protests into a fourth day.

A group representing the truckers did not immediately respond to requests for comment on the price cut.

Late on Wednesday, Brazil's lower house of Congress approved the main text of a bill aimed at resolving the protest, with the measure now passing to the Senate. In addition to eliminating the CIDE tax on diesel, it cut the PIS/Cofins tax on the fuel to zero.

Before the bill's passage, congressman and rapporteur for the bill, Orlando Silva, said it would reduce the final cost of diesel by 14 percent.

Earlier in the day, the government and truckers groups met at the office of Eliseu Padilha, President Michel Temer's chief of staff, but failed to reach an accord after the government did not present a plan to reduce diesel costs, a spokesman for ABCAM, which represents the protesters, told reporters after the meeting.