News of the case helped knock Petrobras shares more than 4 percent
lower. In mid-December, the stock hit its lowest in nearly 10 years
as a widening corruption probe caused the company to delay the
release of its third-quarter earnings.
Petrobras has already been sued by several U.S. investors who bought
American Depositary Receipts sold by the company in New York.
The latest case was filed on Dec. 24 in Manhattan's federal court by
the Labaton Sucharow law firm on behalf of the city of Providence,
Rhode Island, which invested in Petrobras.
The lawsuit proposes to cover $98 billion of securities Petrobras
sold since 2010, and any judgment or settlement would benefit the
investors who purchased those securities.
Allegations include that the company made material misstatements
about the value of its assets in bond offering documents.
Such an allegation does not require proof that misstatements were
made knowingly, and allows plaintiffs to name as defendants the
Brazilian and international banks that managed the sale of those
bonds.
Unlike the previous class actions by ADR holders, the latest lawsuit
also names as defendants Petrobras executives, including Chief
Executive Maria das Gracas Foster.
In Rio de Janeiro, a Petrobras spokeswoman said the company had not
received a citation from the reported class action suit filed on
Christmas Eve.
On the Sao Paulo stock market, Petrobras' shares fell 4.5 percent,
pummeled by Moody's placing its credit rating on review for a
possible downgrade and news of the latest U.S. class action suit.
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The shares were on track to post their steepest loss since Dec. 15
when they plunged about 9.2 percent.
So far 39 people have been indicted on charges that include
corruption, money laundering and racketeering in the Petrobras graft
scheme that allegedly funneled money to political parties, including
Rousseff's Worker's Party and its allies in Congress.
On Monday, Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff said there was no
evidence that Petrobras senior management was involved in the graft
scandal.
Last week, Petrobras said it will scale back spending to avoid
having to issue debt next year. It cannot issue new debt until it
releases third-quarter earnings, which were delayed after auditor
PriceWaterhouseCoopers refused to certify them owing to the
corruption scandal.
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