By Carla Mozee

Brazilian stocks rose Wednesday, buoyed in part by an advance among communications stocks as Spain's Telefonica SA ramped up its pursuit of Brazilian wireless giant Vivo Participacoes SA.

The advance in Brazil's Bovespa equity index was in line with gains among its regional peers and coincided with a strong advance on Wall Street. U.S. shares got a lift from news that pending U.S. home sales rose 6% in April as buyers rushed to beat the expiration of tax subsidy.

The Bovespa rose 1.4% to 62,686, nearly wiping out the bulk of its 1.9% loss on Tuesday.

The broad-based advance in Wednesday's session was led by finance, communications and transportation stocks. Shares of air carriers Gol (GOL) rose 2.6% and Tam (TAM) jumped 4.2%.

The communications group rose 2.4%, with overall advancers on the Bovespa led by a 7.8% surge in shares of telecom company Oi (TNE).

"We believe that [TIM Participacoes] or even Oi could be potential assets for Portugal Telecom," wrote Bradesco analyst Luis Azevedo in a note to clients in the wake of Telefonica's raised bid for Portugal Telecom's stake in Vivo Participacoes (VIV).

Portugal Telecom (PT) is unlikely to leave Brazil, said Azevado, but Telefonica's new offer may encourage the company to look for another Brazilian asset in which to invest.

"The big question would be negotiating with Telecom Italia or even Oi's controlling shareholders (which includes the Brazilian government)," he wrote.

Telefonica's new bid for Portugal Telecom's stake in Vivo now stands at 6.5 billion euros ($8 billion), up from a bid of 5.7 billion euros which was rejected in May. Telefonica and Portugal Telecom are joint-venture partners in Vivo.

Shares of Vivo Participacoes (VIV) lost grip of earlier gains to slip 0.1%.

Mobile services provider TIM (TSU) is the Brazilian unit of Telecom Italia (TI). Its shares advanced 1.9%.

Elsewhere on the deal front, shares of Gerdau (GGB) rose 2.8% after the steel maker proposed a $1.6 billion buyout of the shares it doesn't already own in its U.S. unit, Gerdau Ameristeel.

"We believe this move indicates management's confidence on the recovery of the U.S. operations, which most investors might not be fully pricing in," said Credit Suisse analyst Ivan Fadel in a note to clients.

As Ameristeel becomes a wholly-owned subsidiary, "Gerdau should benefit from a more simplified corporate structure; synergies as well as a more efficient decision-making process," he wrote.

Elsewhere, Mexico's IPC index rose 0.1%. Argentina's Merval gained 0.9% and Chile's IPSA rose 0.8%.

 
 
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