Form 6-K

 

 

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

Washington, D.C. 20549

 

 

FORM 6-K

 

 

REPORT OF FOREIGN ISSUER

PURSUANT TO RULE 13a-16 OR 15d-16 OF

THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

For the month of May 2010

(Commission File No. 1-15256)

 

 

BRASIL TELECOM S.A.

(Exact name of Registrant as specified in its Charter)

BRAZIL TELECOM COMPANY

(Translation of Registrant’s name into English)

 

 

SIA Sul, Área de Serviços Públicos, Lote D, Bloco B

Brasília, D.F., 71.215-000

Federative Republic of Brazil

(Address of Registrant’s principal executive offices)

 

 

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant files or will file annual reports under cover Form 20-F or Form 40-F.

Form 20-F  x            Form 40-F  ¨

Indicate by check mark if the registrant is submitting the Form 6-K in paper as permitted by Regulation S-T Rule 101(b)(1)    .

Indicate by check mark if the registrant is submitting the Form 6-K in paper as permitted by Regulation S-T Rule 101(b)(7)    .

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant by furnishing the information contained in this Form is also thereby furnishing the information to the Commission pursuant to Rule 12g3-2(b) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.

Yes  ¨             No  x

If “Yes” is marked, indicate below the file number assigned to the registrant in connection with Rule 12g3-2(b):

 

 

 


EXHIBITS

 

Exhibit
Number

 

Description of Document

1   Financial Statements of Brasil Telecom S.A. at and for the years ended December 31, 2009 and 2008 prepared in accordance with Brazilian GAAP (Free Translation)


Brasil Telecom S.A. (“BrT”) and

Brasil Telecom S.A. (“BrT”) and

Subsidiaries

Financial Statements as of

December 31, 2009 and 2008 and

Independent Auditors’ Report

 

Page 1


(Convenience Translation into English from the Original Previously Issued in Portuguese)

INDEPENDENT AUDITORS’ REPORT

To the Management and Shareholders of

Brasil Telecom S.A.

Brasília, DF

 

1. We have audited the accompanying balance sheets, Company and consolidated, of Brasil Telecom S.A. and subsidiaries, as of December 31, 2009 and 2008, and the related statements of operations, changes in shareholders’ equity (Company), cash flows and value added, for the years then ended, prepared under the responsibility of the Company’s Management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements.

 

2. Our audits were conducted in accordance with auditing standards in Brazil and comprised: (a) planning of the work, taking into consideration the significance of the balances, volume of transactions, and the accounting and internal control systems of the Company and its subsidiaries; (b) checking, on a test basis, the evidence and records that support the amounts and accounting information disclosed; and (c) evaluating the significant accounting practices and estimates adopted by the Company’s Management, as well as the presentation of the financial statements taken as a whole.

 

3. In our opinion, the financial statements referred to in paragraph 1 present fairly, in all material respects, the individual and consolidated financial positions of Brasil Telecom S.A. and its subsidiaries as of December 31, 2009 and 2008, and the results of their operations, the changes in shareholders' equity (Company), their cash flows, and the values added in operations for the years then ended, in conformity with Brazilian accounting practices.

 

4. As commented in note 1(b), on September 25, 2009, the Supervisory Board and the Board of Directors of Brasil Telecom S.A. and its shareholder Coari Participações S.A. approved Step 3 of Stage 2 of the Corporate Restructuring, which comprises the exchange of shares held by non-controlling shareholders in Brasil Telecom S.A. for shares of Coari Participações S.A.

 

5. As described in note 2, as a result of the convergence of accounting practices, criteria and estimates and understanding of the new controlling shareholder, which identified certain differences of understanding on the conceptual application of prior periods’ accounting standards, the balance sheets as of December 31, 2008 and statements of operations for the year then ended, presented for comparative purposes, were reclassified and are being restated as provided in NPC 12 Accounting Policies, Changes in Accounting Estimates and Errors, approved by CVM Resolution 506/06.

 

6. The accompanying financial statements have been translated into English for the convenience of readers outside Brazil.

Rio de Janeiro, March 11, 2010

 

DELOITTE TOUCHE TOHMATSU

   Marco Antonio Brandão Simurro

Auditores Independentes

   Engagement Partner

 

Page 2


(Convenience Translation into English from the Original Previously Issued in Portuguese)

Brasil Telecom S.A. (“BrT”) and

Brasil Telecom S.A. (“BrT”) and Subsidiaries

Balance Sheets as of December 31, 2009 and 2008

In thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated.

 

          Company    Consolidated  
     Note    2009    Reclassified
2008
   2009    Reclassified
2008
 

Assets

              

Current

              

Cash and cash equivalents

   9    705,836    580,978    1,717,441    1,478,558   

Short-term investments

   9    118,476    135,672    381,951    561,867   

Trade accounts receivable

   10    1,769,378    1,959,083    1,992,141    2,210,090   

Inventories

      2,280    4,748    42,063    54,048   

Due from related parties

   11    29,008         

Deferred and recoverable taxes

   12    711,360    672,655    1,001,255    935,690   

Escrow deposits

   13    351,501    673,834    359,561    678,972   

Other assets

      130,218    160,707    179,469    188,237   
                        
      3,818,057    4,187,677    5,673,881    6,107,462   
                        

Noncurrent

              

Noncurrent assets

              

Due from related parties

   11    1,342,313       1,674,750   

Deferred and recoverable taxes

   12    4,140,948    717,761    5,052,839    1,523,772   

Escrow deposits

   13    1,576,757    2,210,475    1,596,736    2,224,993   

Other assets

      166,936    132,534    186,687    145,625   

Investments

   14    3,955,331    3,998,596    5,374    3,744   

Property, plant and equipment

   15    5,476,413    4,333,280    6,993,405    5,902,124   

Intangible assets

   16    508,794    562,203    1,572,404    1,632,218   
                        
      17,167,492    11,954,849    17,082,195    11,432,476   
                        

Total assets

      20,985,549    16,142,526    22,756,076    17,539,938   
                        
Liabilities and shareholders’ equity               

Current liabilities

              

Trade accounts payable

      1,131,439    1,333,291    1,554,278    1,889,543   

Loans and financing

   17    1,502,029    1,468,344    1,003,352    760,627   

Payroll, related taxes and benefits

      45,274    80,276    83,608    110,157   

Deferred and payable taxes

   19    550,164    582,205    691,861    700,019   

Tax refinancing program

   20    27,704    4,381    29,683    4,434   

Dividends/interest on capital and profit sharing

   22    128,477    403,364    141,253    424,022   

Reserve for contingent liabilities

   21    406,893    199,565    433,390    218,297   

Accruals for pension fund

   24    104,533    148,391    104,533    148,391   

Permits and concessions payable

   18       65,578    99,240    160,074   

Other liabilities

      316,872    230,447    365,180    344,379   
                        
      4,213,385    4,515,842    4,506,378    4,759,943   
                        

Noncurrent liabilities

              

Long-term liabilities

              

Loans and financing

   17    3,096,298    3,811,555    3,637,497    4,125,351   

Payroll, related taxes and benefits

         10,971    1,085    11,483   

Deferred and payable taxes

   19    233,434    232,050    273,552    259,960   

Tax refinancing program

   20    327,347       355,051    713   

Reserve for contingent liabilities

   21    1,394,845    674,290    1,440,105    710,380   

Accruals for pension fund

   24    575,180    607,400    575,180    607,400   

Permits and concessions payable

   18          609,848    623,585   

Advances from customers

      30,144    34,908    240,732    189,172   

Other liabilities

      20,015    14,558    21,233    16,655   
                        
      5,677,263    5,385,732    7,154,283    6,544,699   
                        

Non-controlling interests

            514    (5,656

Shareholders’ equity

   22            
Capital       3,731,059    3,470,758    3,731,059    3,470,758   
Capital reserves       6,980,315    1,338,246    6,980,315    1,338,246   
Capital expenditure reserve       383,527    1,431,948    383,527    1,431,948   
                        
      11,094,901    6,240,952    11,094,901    6,240,952   
                        

Total liabilities and shareholders’ equity

      20,985,549    16,142,526    22,756,076    17,539,938   
                        

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.

 

Page 3


(Convenience Translation into English from the Original Previously Issued in Portuguese)

Brasil Telecom S.A. (“BrT”) and

Brasil Telecom S.A. (“BrT”) and Subsidiaries

Statements of Operations at

For the Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

In thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated

 

          Company     Consolidated  
     Note    2009     Reclassified
2008
    2009     Reclassified
2008
 

Gross operating revenue

   4    15,163,404      14,395,739      17,771,913      17,007,142   

Deductions from gross revenue

      (6,208,444   (4,747,840   (6,893,351   (5,425,960
                           

Net operating revenue

      8,954,960      9,647,899      10,878,562      11,581,182   

Cost of services rendered and goods sold

   5    (4,719,752   (4,960,004   (5,905,598   (6,180,293
                           

Gross profit

      4,235,208      4,687,895      4,972,964      5,400,889   
                           

Operating income (expenses)

           

Equity in subsidiaries

   14    (46,664   (52,333    

Selling expenses

   5    (1,049,761   (918,206   (1,391,535   (1,338,360

General and administrative expenses

   5    (1,128,191   (1,109,710   (1,434,808   (1,339,567

Other operating incomes (expenses), net

   6    (3,214,112   (504,100   (3,417,476   (731,549
                           
      (5,438,728   (2,584,349   (6,243,819   (3,409,476
                           

Operating income (expenses) before financial income (expenses)

      (1,203,520   2,103,546      (1,270,855   1,991,413   

Financial income

      432,912      431,430      576,197      697,190   

Financial expenses

      (752,612   (971,250   (857,546   (1,109,170
                           

Financial expenses, net

   7    (319,700   (539,820   (281,349   (411,980
                           

Income (loss) before taxes

      (1,523,220   1,563,726      (1,552,204   1,579,433   

Income tax and social contribution

           

Current

   8    (448,012   (569,228   (449,903   (637,908

Deferred

   8    828,543      35,318      861,418      86,440   
                           

Income (loss) before non-controlling interests

      (1,142,689   1,029,816      (1,140,689   1,027,965   

Non-controlling interests

          (2,000   1,851   
                           

Net income (loss) for the year

      (1,142,689   1,029,816      (1,142,689   1,029,816   
                           

Shares outstanding at balance sheet date (thousands)

      589,789      547,499       
                   

Net income (loss) per share at yearend (R$)

      (1.94   1.88094       
                   

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.

 

Page 4


(Convenience Translation into English from the Original Previously Issued in Portuguese)

Brasil Telecom S.A. (“BrT”) and

Brasil Telecom S.A. (“BrT”) and Subsidiaries

Statements of Changes in the Shareholders’ Equity

For the Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

In thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated.

 

     Capital    Capital reserves     Capital expenditure reserve     Total  
        Share subscription
premium
    Special
goodwill on
merger
   Special
reserve on
merger of
net assets
   Investment
grants
   Interest on
works in
progress
   Special
inflation
adjustment –
Law 8200/1991
   Stock
Options
    Other     Legal
Reserve
    Investment
reserve
    Retained
earnings
   
        Goodwill
Reserve
   Treasury
shares
                     Other
reserves
   Treasury
shares
         

Balances as of December 31, 2007 (Reclassified)

   3,470,758    458,684    (99,822         123,558    745,756    31,287    872      123,334    (54,870   349,155        356,750      5,505,462   

Net income for the year

                                     1,029,816      1,029,816   

Expired dividends

                                     20,484      20,484   

Allocation of net income:

                                      

Legal reserve constitution

                                 51,491        (51,491  

Interest on shareholders´ capital (R$0.5923)

                                     (324,300   (324,300

Investment reserve

                                      

Allocation to previous years

                                   377,277      (377,277  

Destination of the Year of 2008

                                   654,025      (654,025  

Goodwill on stock option

                            1,953    2,563            4,516   

Share-based payments

                          4,931               43      4,974   
                                                                                  

Balances as of December 31, 2008

   3,470,758    458,684    (99,822         123,558    745,756    31,287    5,803      125,287    (52,307   400,646      1,031,302        6,240,952   

Mergers

                                      

Copart 2 (a)

           366,787    2,378                          369,165   

Brasil Telecom Participações S.A. (b)

   260,301         3,861,439    1,413,592                        82,637      5,617,969   

Net loss for the year

                                     (1,142,689   (1,142,689

Absorption of year loss

                                 (17,119   (1,031,302   1,048,421     

Expired dividends

                                     11,501      11,501   

Premium on stock options

                            1,085    2,487            3,572   

Stock option plan

                          (5,699            130      (5,569
                                                                                  
   3,731,059    458,684    (99,822   4,228,226    1,415,970    123,558    745,756    31,287    104      126,372    (49,820   383,527          11,094,901   
                                                                                  

Balance as of December 31, 2009

   3,731,059    6,980,315      383,527      11,094,901   
                       

 

     2009    2008

Book value per share (R$)

   18.81    11.40
         

 

(a) Recognition of special goodwill reserve on merger of Copart 2 on July 31, 2009.
(b) Capital increase and recognition of special goodwill reserve on merger of BrT Part on September 30, 2009.

 

Page 5


(Convenience Translation into English from the Original Previously Issued in Portuguese)

Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Statements of Cash Flows

For the Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

In thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated

 

     Company     Consolidated  
     2009     2008     2009     2008  

Cash flows from operating activities

        

Net income (loss) before income tax and social contribution

   (1,523,220   1,563,726      (1,552,204   1,579,433   

Items not affecting cash

        

Depreciation and amortization

   1,364,951      1,486,702      1,980,544      2,066,046   

Losses on trade receivables

   450,862      301,956      549,602      370,242   

Reserve for contingent liabilities

   3,316,626      688,223      3,339,706      711,486   

Accruals for pension fund

   5,817      81,324      5,817      81,324   

Recovery of pension funds expenses – surplus

     (61,104     (61,104

Proceeds from write-off of permanent assets

   21,407      38,207      78,300      6,921   

Equity in subsidiaries

   46,664      52,333       

Losses (gains) on investments

     1,269        35,010   

Financial charges

   493,872      662,727      488,427      622,995   
                        
   5,700,199      3,251,637      6,442,396      3,832,920   
                        

Changes in assets and liabilities

        

Customers receivables

   (261,157   (329,200   (331,653   (390,631

Inventories

   2,468      1,390      11,985      (21,338

Payroll, related taxes and benefits

   (45,975   10,329      (36,949   18,091   

Trade accounts payable

   (64,045   (155,947   (100,748   (367,808

Taxes

   (58,267   (96,728   (55,393   (152,173

Permits and concessions payable

   (65,578   65,578      (74,571   90,773   

Reserve for contingent liabilities

   (335,107   (439,090   (348,240   (451,050

Accruals for pension fund

   (81,895   (13,278   (81,895   (13,278

Tax Refinancing Program

   350,670        379,587     

Other asset and liability accounts

   119,056      36,661      12,573      99,052   
                        
   (439,830   (920,285   (625,304   (1,188,362
                        

Cash provided by operating activities

        

Interest paid

   (619,859   (515,348   (580,949   (525,468

Income tax and social contribution paid – Company

   (383,775   (565,485   (426,785   (619,923

Income tax and social contribution paid – Third parties

   (12,736   (16,685   (20,103   (23,444
                        
   (1,016,370   (1,097,518 )   (1,027,837   (1,168,835
                        

Net cash provided by operating activities

   2,720,779      2,797,560      3,237,051      3,055,156   
                        

 

Page 6


Brasil Telecom S.A. (“BrT”) and

Brasil Telecom S.A. (“BrT”) and Subsidiaries

Statements of Cash Flows

For the Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

In thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated.

 

     Company     Consolidated  
     2009     2008     2009     2008  

Cash flows from investing activities

        

Short-term investments

   17,196      179,911      179,916      1,283,442   

Credit with related parties

       (300,000  

Escrow deposits

   (1,455,113   (1,710,775   (1,476,340   (1,723,203

Funds obtained in the sale of permanent assets

   6,548      24,096      6,788      24,223   

Permanent assets investments

   (730,685   (1,087,418   (1,398,252   (1,438,442

Investments

     (25,920   (1,500  

Fixed and intangible assets

   (730,685   (1,061,498   (1,396,752   (1,438,442
                        

Net cash used in investing activities

   (2,162,054   (2,594,186   (2,987,888   (1,853,980
                        

Cash flows from financing activities

        

Dividends/ interest on capital paid in the year

   (274,764   (684,610   (274,764   (684,610

Loans and financing

   (437,460   742,418      (13,873   378,000   

Borrowings

   494,167      1,103,756      757,014      739,338   

Repayment of loans, financing and debentures

   (931,627   (336,428   (770,887   (336,428

Payment of liability due to lease

     (24,910     (24,910
                        

Net cash provided by (used in) financing activities

   (712,224   57,808      (288,637   (306,610
                        

Cash and cash equivalent acquired from BrT Part merger (Note 1 (b) (v))

   278,357        278,357     
                        

Cash flows for the year

   124,858      261,182      238,883      894,566   
                        

Cash and cash equivalents

        

Cash and cash equivalents at end of year

   705,836      580,978      1,717,441      1,478,558   

Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of year

   580,978      319,796      1,478,558      583,992   
                        

Changes in the year

   124,858      261,182      238,883      894,566   
                        

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.

 

Page 7


(Convenience Translation into English from the Original Previously Issued in Portuguese)

Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Statements of Value Added

For the Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

In thousands of Brazilian Reais, unless otherwise stated

 

     Company     Consolidated  
     2009     2008     2009     2008  

Income

        

Sales of services and products

   15,163,404      14,395,739      17,771,913      17,007,142   

Voluntary discounts and reimbursements

   (2,721,910   (1,064,653   (2,958,049   (1,320,766

Provision for doubtful debts

   (450,862   (301,956   (549,602   (370,242

Other operating incomes (expenses), net

   196,537      430,161      236,582      463,579   
                        
   12,187,169      13,459,291      14,500,844      15,779,713   
                        

Supplies acquired from third parties

        

Materials

   (93,805   (64,546   (301,636   (395,232

Third-party services

   (4,167,559   (4,313,519   (4,506,598   (4,730,837

Others

   (72,199   (92,802   (100,250   (93,636
                        
   (4,333,563   (4,470,867   (4,908,484   (5,219,705
                        

Gross value added

   7,853,606      8,988,424      9,592,360      10,560,008   

Retentions

        

Depreciation and amortization

   (1,364,951   (1,486,702   (1,980,544   (2,066,046

Reserve for contingent liabilities

   (3,516,422   (688,222   (3,550,211   (711,486
                        
   (4,881,373   (2,174,924   (5,530,755   (2,777,532
                        

Wealth created by Company

   2,972,233      6,813,500      4,061,605      7,782,476   

Wealth received in transfer

        

Equity in subsidiaries

   (46,664   (52,333    

Dividends (investments at acquisition cost)

     3,016        3,016   

Financial income

   432,912      431,430      576,197      697,190   

Rental incomes

   129,816      121,040      89,693      86,975   
                        
   516,064      503,153      665,890      787,181   
                        

Total wealth for distribution

   3,488,297      7,316,653      4,727,495      8,569,657   
                        

Wealth distributed

        

Personnel

        

Salaries and wages

   (177,529   (227,987   (379,806   (409,784

Benefits

   (158,229   (221,495   (288,242   (337,805

Severance pay fund (FGTS)

   (67,902   (34,963   (89,383   (49,685

Other

   (47,083   (81,324   (47,083   (81,324
                        
   (450,743   (565,769   (804,514   (878,598
                        

Taxes and contributions

        

Federal

   (305,119   (1,411,824   (596,223   (1,759,656

State

   (2,985,605   (3,152,079   (3,333,070   (3,493,436

Municipal

   (11,708   (12,745   (33,583   (34,657
                        
   (3,302,432   (4,576,648   (3,962,876   (5,287,749
                        

 

Page 8


Brasil Telecom S.A. (“BrT”) and

Brasil Telecom S.A. (“BrT”) and Subsidiaries

Statements of Value Added

For the Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

In thousands of Brazilian rais, unless otherwise stated

 

     Company     Consolidated  
     2009     2008     2009     2008  

Donations & sponsorship

   (14,642   (23,283   (15,824   (23,006

Lessors and lenders

        

Employee profit sharing

   (30,995     (45,243  

Interest & other financial charges

   (550,050   (823,011   (643,311   (950,983

Rentals, leases and insurances

   (282,124   (298,126   (396,416   (401,356
                        
   (863,169   (1,121,137   (1,084,970   (1,352,339
                        

Shareholders

        

Non-controlling interests

       (2,000   1,851   

Retained earnings

   1,142,689      (1,029,816   1,142,689      (1,029,816
                        
   1,142,689      (1,029,816   1,140,689      (1,027,965
                        

Value added distributed

   3,488,297      7,316,653      4,727,495      8,569,657   
                        

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.

 

Page 9


(Convenience Translation into English from the Original Previously Issued in Portuguese)

Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements

For the Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

1. OPERATIONS

Brasil Telecom S.A. (“Company” or “BrT”) is a STFC concessionaire – Switched Fixed Telephone Service and performs since July of 1998 in the Region II of PGO – Grant General Plan, that includes the Brazilian states of Acre, Rondônia, Mato Grosso, Mato Grosso do Sul, Tocantins, Goiás, Paraná, Santa Catarina and Rio Grande do Sul, besides Federal District, in the installment of STFC in the modalities of local and long intra-regional distance. Since January 2004, the Company has also been providing services in the form of national and international long-distance calls in all Regions and, as from January 2005, local calls also started to be provided outside Region II.

The company business, as well as the services rendered by it and the rates charged are regulated by ANATEL – Brazilian National Agency of Telecommunications.

The concession contracts in force, in the local services and long distance modes, came into effect starting from January 1, 2006, with validity until December 31, 2025. Additional information on those contracts is mentioned in the Note 23 (h).

Information relating to STFC quality and universal service targets is available for shareholders monitoring at ANATEL’s electronic page, on the following website: www.anatel.gov.br.

The Company is a Brazilian Securities and Exchange Commission (CVM) and the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) registrant, and its shares are traded on the BOVESPA and the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) as American Depositary Receipts (ADRs).

Since September 30, 2009 the Company’s shareholder’s control is exercised directly by Coari Participações S.A. (“Coari”), whose equity represents 79.63% of voting capital and 48.20% of total capital. Until mentioned date, the Company was controlled by Brasil Telecom Participações S.A. ( “BrT Part”), a company constituted on May 22, 1998 due to the process of privatization of Telebrás System.

The corporate restructuring resulting in direct control of the Company by Coari is presented in specific comments of this note – see item “b”, and had origin at the Brasil Telecom’s acquisition by Telemar Norte Leste S.A. (“TMAR”) that, on January 8, 2009 acquired through its indirect subsidiary Copart 1 Participações S.A. (“Copart 1”) the stock control of BrT Part and of the Company.

The change of control of Brasil Telecom to Telemar consisted of the acquisition of 100% of Invitel S. A. shares (“Invitel”), at the time holding 99.99% of the shares of Solpart Participações S.A. (“Solpart”), which held 51.41% of BrT Part voting capital and 18.93% of its total capital.

The Share Acquisition Agreement (the “Agreement”), entered into on April 25, 2008, was disclosed through a Material Fact by the involved companies issued on the same date, and supplemental material facts were issued on events or facts inherent to the Contract. All material facts are available for consultation on the website www.brasiltelecom.com.br/ri.

 

Page 10


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

(a) Main direct and indirect subsidiaries of the Company

14 Brasil Telecom Celular S.A. (“BrT Celular”)

BrT’s wholly-owned subsidiary, which operates since the last quarter of 2004 to provide Personal Mobile Services (“SMP”), and has a permit to operate in Region II of the PGO.

BrT Serviços de Internet S.A. (“BrTI”)

BrT’s wholly-owned subsidiary, which holds the control of the following entities:

 

   

iG Companies

The iG companies comprise Internet Group (Cayman) Limited (“iG Cayman”), iG Participações S.A. (“iG Part”) and Internet Group do Brasil S.A. (“iG Brasil”). iG Brasil operates as a dialup and broadband Internet access provider. It also provides value-added services targeted for the home and corporate markets, including the Internet connection accelerator. In addition, iG also sells advertising space on its portal.

iG Cayman is a holding company that controls control of iG Part, where exists investments of 32.53% of iG Brasil joint stock. iG Part and iG Brasil are firms established in Brazil.

Brasil Telecom Cabos Submarinos Ltda. (“BrT CS”)

“BrT CS”, together with its subsidiaries, operates through a system of underwater optical fiber cables, with connection points in the United States, Bermuda, Venezuela and Brazil, allowing data traffic through integrated service packages, offered to local and foreign corporate customers.

BrT Comunicação Multimídia Ltda. (“BrT Multimídia”)

The Company held 90.46% interest in the capital of BrT Multimídia, whereas the remaining 9.54% is held by BrTI.

BrT Multimídia provides private telecommunications network services through local optical fiber digital networks in São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro and Belo Horizonte, and a long-distance network connecting these metropolitan business centers. It operates nationwide through commercial agreements with other telecommunications companies to offer services to the other Brazilian regions. It also has Internet Solution Centers in São Paulo, Brasilia, Curitiba, Porto Alegre, Rio de Janeiro and Fortaleza, which offer services of “co-location”, “hosting” and other services of aggregate value.

Brasil Telecom Call Center S.A. (“BrT Call Center”)

BrT Call Center´s business purpose is the provision of call center services for third parties, including customer service, outbound and inbound telemarketing, training, support, consulting services and related activities, among other services. This company’s startup was in November 2007 by providing call center services for BrT and its subsidiaries which require this type of service. Previously, the call center services were outsourced.

 

Page 11


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

BrT Card Serviços Financeiros Ltda. (“BrT Card”)

BrT Card, established to provide management, control and support services for the development and sale of financial products and services, holds 99.99% of the shares, whereas the remaining capital is held by BrTI. At balance sheet date, BrT Card had only highly liquid cash investments resulting from the payment of capital, and had not yet started its operations.

(b) Company corporate restructuring

The purpose of the corporate restructuring was to optimize the control structure, streamline cross-shareholdings and use the synergy between activities, enhancing operational efficiency.

On December 19, 2008, the National Telecommunications Agency (ANATEL) issued Act 7828, whereby the Executive Board granted prior approval for the subsequent corporate acts regarding the merger of the companies or the merger of the shares of the companies Invitel, Solpart and BrT Part by TMAR.

According to the Material Fact disclosed on July, 15, 2009 and the amendment to this Material Fact on July, 21, 2009, as well as the Material Fact disclosed on August, 12, 2009, the Stage 1 and the Step 2 of Stage 2 of corporate restructuring were performed, on July, 31 and September, 30, 2009, respectively, comprehending a series of mergers, in terms of arts. 230 and 252 of Brazilian Corporate Law by TMAR subsidiaries firms, as described below.

 

  (i) Merger of Invitel by its subsidiary Solpart, with absorption of the equity of Invitel by Solpart and the resulting Invitel´s extinction on July 31, 2009.

 

  (ii) Merger of Solpart by its parent company Copart 1, with absorption of the equity of Solpart by Copart 1 and the consequent Solpart´s extinction on July 31, 2009.

 

  (iii) Merger of Copart 1 by BrT Part., with absorption of the equity of Copart 1 by BrT Part, through which Coari, holder of all the shares of Copart 1, received BrT Part shares in exchange for its Copart 1 shares, which was liquidated on July 31, 2009.

 

  (iv) Merger of Copart 2 by BrT, with absorption of the equity of Copart 2, through which Coari, holder of all the shares of Copart 2, received BrT shares in exchange for its Copart 2 shares, which was liquidated on July 31, 2009.

The net assets of Copart 2 merged by BrT Part totaled R$369,165, without resulting in a capital increase of BrT Part, an amount fully recorded as capital reserve, pursuant to Article 200 of the Brazilian Corporate Law.

As a result of the merger of Copart 2, 0.0005041618 BrT common shares were exchanged for each Copart 2 common share and 0.0471152627 BrT preferred shares were exchanged for each Copart 2 preferred share (share exchange ratio).

 

Page 12


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

The Company holds 13,231,556 own preferred shares in treasury, which have been kept in treasury.

 

  (v) Merger of BrT Part by BrT, with absorption of the equity of BrT Part, through which Coari, holder of 54.45% of BrT Part shares and 10.62% of BrT shares, received 231,077,513 shares, where 161,359,129 common and 69,718,384 preferred were exchanged for its BrT Part shares, liquidated on September 30, 2009. As a result, Coari holds 48.20% of BrT equity.

The net assets of BrT Part merged by BrT totaled R$5,535,332, resulting in a capital increase of BrT of R$260,301, where R$1,413,592 was recorded as capital reserve and R$3,861,439 was allocated to special goodwill reserve, pursuant to CVM Instruction 319/1999.

The capital increase is represented by the issue of 201,143,307 common shares and 209,155,151 preferred shares of BrT, which were fully attributed to BrT Part shareholders. Therefore, BrT capital increased R$3,731,059, represented by 203,423,176 common shares and 399,597,370 shares.

As a result of BrT Part merger, 1.2190981 common shares of BrT were exchanged for each BrT Part common share and 0.1720066 BrT common shares and 0.9096173 BrT preferred shares for each BrT Part preferred share (share exchange ratio

BrT Part holds 1,480,800 common shares in treasury, which have been cancelled. BrT holds 13,231,556 preferred shares in treasury, which have been kept in treasury.

All valuations of the equities and net assets of the merged companies have been conducted by specialized companies, in compliance with Articles 226 and 227 of the Brazilian Corporate Law, based on carrying amounts as of May 31, 2009, adjusted by corporate events that occurred from this date to the mergers’ date (July 31, 2009 and September 30, 2009) and the most significant subsequent events. Other changes in financial position have been recorded by the merging company:

 

Balance Sheet – Copart 2

   05/31/2009

Current assets

   7,258

Investments

   559,390

Intangible assets

   366,788
    

Total Assets

   933,436
    

Current Liabilities

   4,880

Noncurrent liabilities

   1

Shareholders’ equity

   928,555
    

Total liabilities

   933,436
    

 

Page 13


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

Balance sheet – BrT Part

   05/31/2009

Current assets

   584,415

Noncurrent assets

   1,495,722

Investments

   7,345,051

Property, plant and equipment

   455
    

Total Assets

   9,425,643
    

Current Liabilities

   330,789

Noncurrent liabilities

   11,512

Shareholders’ equity

   9,083,342
    

Total Liabilities

   9,425,643
    

Changes in shareholders’ equity from May 31, 2009 to September 30, 2009 were accounted by the Company and total R$82,637.

As required by Law 6404/76 (Brazilian Corporate Law), the mergers have been submitted to and approved by the shareholders of Invitel, Solpart, Copart 1, BrT Part, Copart 2, Coari and the Company, at the Shareholders’ Meetings of said companies held on July 31, 2009 and September 30, 2009.

The Company’s shareholder structure as of September 30, 2009 is as follows:

 

Shareholder structure – Brasil Telecom S.A.

 

  

Shareholder

   Common shares    %     Preferred shares    %     Total    %  

Coari

   161,990,001    79.63   128,675,049    32.20   290,665,050    48.20

Non-controlling interests

   41,433,175    20.37   257,690,765    64.49   299,123,940    49.60

Treasury shares

        13,231,556    3.31   13,231,556    2.20
                                 

Total

   203,423,176    100.00   399,597,370    100.00   603,020,546    100.00
                                 

Goodwill originally recorded under Brazilian GAAP by Copart 1, merged by BrT Part, arises partly from the merger of Solpart by Copart 1 and partly from the merger of Invitel by Solpart, in the total nominal amount of R$8,235,520, related to the acquisition of 100% of the shares of Invitel and 35.52% of the shares of BrT Part. Recorded goodwill is based on the appreciation of the property, plant and equipment and the Switched Fixed Telephony Services (STFC) concession right of the Company. As a result of the merger of Copart 1 by BrT Part, goodwill will be amortized in books by BrT Part pursuant to prevailing tax and accounting legislation, and will not generate any tax utilization in the first phase of the corporate restructuring.

Goodwill originally recorded under Brazilian GAAP by Copart 2, merged by the Company, totaling R$737,664, arises from the acquisition of 10.62% of the shares of BrT and is based on the appreciation of the property, plant and equipment and the Switched Fixed Telephony Services (STFC) concession right of the Company. As a result of the merger of Copart 2 by the Company, goodwill will be amortized in books by BrT, pursuant to prevailing tax and accounting legislation, and will generate tax utilization.

 

Page 14


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

Note that for the calculation of the net asset resulting from the downstream mergers of Copart 1 and Copart 2 into and with BrT Part and BrT, respectively, Copart 1 and Copart 2 recorded as in force of provision for net equity integrity maintenance of its subsidiaries, the amounts of R$4,072,381 and R$340,522, respectively. The recognized provisions reduce goodwill amounts based in STFC Company concession to the amount of the related tax benefit due to its amortization, as prescribed by Article 1, Paragraph (a) of CVM Instruction 319/1999.

After the completion of the Step 2 of the Stage 2, the resulting corporate structure is:

LOGO

Under the U.S. Securities Act of 1933, the merger of the BrT Part (Stage 2) was declared as effective by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on September 2, 2009.

According to the disclosed in the Material Fact, from August 12, 2009, continuing the corporate restructuring process, the Coari's and BrT’s Board of Directors and managements, approved the Step 3 of the Stage 2 of the Corporate Restructuring, on September 25, 2009, which defines the merging of BrT shares by Coari, open company, direct subsidiary of TMAR, objectifying to turn BrT into a wholly-owned Coari’s subsidiary; however, in function of facts disclosed in the Material Fact published on January 14, 2010, the process is currently paused.

 

Page 15


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

2. PRESENTATION OF CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND CONSOLIDATION CRITERIA

Financial statements preparation criteria

The financial statements have been prepared and are presented in accordance with Brazilian accounting practices, provisions of the Brazilian Corporate Law and CVM regulations, and the changes introduced by Laws 11638/07 and 11941/09.

With the enactment of Law 11638/07, which was designed to update the Brazilian Corporate Law, so as to enable the convergence of Brazilian accounting practices with the International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS), new accounting standards and technical pronouncements have been issued by the Accounting Pronouncements Committee (CPC), in conformity with such international accounting standards.

In 2009, 26 new pronouncements (CPCs) and 12 technical interpretations (ICPCs) were issued by CPC and approved by CVM Resolutions for mandatory adoption beginning 2010. The CPCs and ICPCs which may be applicable to the Company, considering the nature of its operations, are as follows:

 

CPC

  

Title

15    Business Combinations
16    Inventories
20    Borrowing Costs
21    Interim Financial Reporting
22    Operating Segments
23    Accounting Policies, Changes in Accounting Estimates and Errors
24    Events after the Reporting Period
25    Provisions, Contingent Liabilities and Contingent Assets
26    Presentation of Financial Statements
27    Property, Plant and Equipment
30    Revenues
32    Income Taxes
33    Employee Benefits
36    Consolidated Financial Statements
37    First-time Adoption of International Financial Reporting Standards
38    Financial Instruments: Recognition and Measurement
39    Financial Instruments: Presentation
40    Financial Instruments: Disclosures
43    First-time Adoption of Technical Pronouncements CPC 15 to 40

ICPC

  

Title

01    Concession Agreements
04    Scope of Technical Pronouncement CPC 10 Share-based Payment
05    Technical Pronouncement CPC 10 Share-based Payment – Treasury and Group Share Transactions

 

Page 16


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

08    Accounting for Proposed Dividend Payments
10    Clarifications of Technical Pronouncements CPC 27 - Property, Plant and Equipment and CPC 28 - Investment Property

The Company’s management is analyzing the effects of the changes introduced by these new pronouncement and, in the event of adjustments arising from the adoption of new accounting practices beginning January 1, 2010, the Company will analyze the need to remeasure the impacts that would be produced on its 2009 financial statements, for comparative purposes, as if the new procedures were already in effect at the beginning of the year ended December 31, 2009.

Consolidation criteria

The Company and its subsidiaries maintain consistent accounting practices.

Consolidated financial statements were prepared according to CVM Instruction 247/1996 and include the financial statements of the Company’s direct and indirect subsidiaries. The main consolidation procedures are as follows:

 

   

Addition of assets, liabilities, income and expense accounts according to their accounting substance;

 

   

Elimination of intercompany accounts and transactions;

 

   

Elimination of investments and equity interests in subsidiaries;

 

   

Disclosure of non-controlling interests in shareholders’ equity and income (loss); and

 

   

Consolidation of exclusive investment funds (note 9).

Adoption of Technical Pronouncement CPC 02 Effects of Changes in Exchange Rates and Translation of Financial Statements

a) Functional and reporting currency

The Company and its subsidiaries operate has telecom carriers in the Brazil and engage in related telecom industry activities (see note 1), and the currency used in their operations is the Brazilian real (R$).

To define their functional currency, management considered the currency that influences:

 

   

the sale price of their products and services;

 

   

the costs of services and sales;

 

   

the cash flows for trade receivables and trade payments; and

 

   

interest, investments and borrowings.

 

Page 17


(Convenience Translation into English from the Original Previously Issued in Portuguese)

Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For the Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

Accordingly, the Company and its subsidiaries’ functional currency is the Brazilian real (R$), which is also the reporting currency.

b) Transactions and balances

The transactions in foreign currency are translated into the functional currency using the exchange rate in effect on the transaction date. Foreign exchange differences from translation are recognized in the statement of operations.

c) Group companies

The Company has investments in companies headquartered abroad, none of which is hyperinflationary economies and with functional currency other than the Brazilian real (R$).

d) Non-cash items indexed to foreign currency

The company and its subsidiaries do not have non-cash items indexed to foreign currency (other than the functional and reporting currency).

 

Page 18


(Convenience Translation into English from the Original Previously Issued in Portuguese)

Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For the Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

Reclassifications

We reclassified several items of the comparative financial statements for the year ended December 31, 2008 to conform them to the best disclosure accounting practices. These reclassifications are as follows:

 

     Balances
originally
reported as
of 12/31/2008
    Inflation
adjustment
of reserve
for
contingent
liabilities
(i)
    Employee and
management
profit sharing
(ii)
    Taxes (iii)     Reversal
of interest
on capital
(iv)
    Share-based
compensation

(v)
    Tax
Refinincing
Program
(vi)
    Consignment
in favor of
third parties
(vii)
    Deferred
income tax/
social
contribution
(viii)
    Loans and
financing
(ix)
    Company
Adjusted
balances as
of 12/31/2008
 

Deferred and recoverable taxes (current)

   704,281                    (31,626     672,655   

Deferred and recoverable taxes (noncurrent)

   816,000                    (98,239     717,761   

Trade accounts payable

   1,486,435                  (153,144       1,333,291   

Loans and financing (current)

   1,378,424                      89,920      1,468,344   

Derivative financial instruments (current)

   89,920                      (89,920  

Payable and deferred taxes (current)

   618,212                (4,381     (31,626     582,205   

Tax Refinancing Program (Floating)

               4,381            4,381   

Other liabilities (current)

   77,303                  153,144          230,447   

Loans and financing (noncurrent)

   3,679,402                      132,153      3,811,555   

Derivative financial instruments (noncurrent)

   132,153                      (132,153  

Payable and deferred taxes (noncurrent)

   330,289                    (98,239     232,050   

Cost of sales and services

   (4,981,993     21,989                    (4,960,004

Service selling expenses

   (938,015     19,809                    (918,206

General and administrative expenses

   (1,165,656     38,535          17,411              (1,109,710

Other operating income (expenses), net

   (401,323   131,098      (80,333   (136,131     (17,411           (504,100

Financial expenses

Net

   (733,022   (131,098       324,300                (539,820

Reversal of interest on capital – DRE

   324,300            (324,300            

Deductions from gross revenue

   (4,883,971       136,131                  (4,747,840

 

     Assets     Liabilities     Gross
profit

Total effects

   (129,865   (129,865   150,120

 

Page 19


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

     Balances
originally
reported as
of
12/31/2008
    Inflation
adjustment
of reserve
for
contingent
liabilities
(i)
    Employee
and
management
profit
sharing (ii)
    Taxes (iii)     Reversal
of interest
on capital
(iv)
    Share-based
compensation (v)
    Tax
Refinincing
Program
(vi)
    Consignment
in favor of
third parties
(vii)
    Deferred
income tax/
social
contribution
(viii)
    Loans and
financing
(ix)
    Consolidated
Adjusted
balances as
of
12/31/2008
 

Deferred and recoverable taxes (current)

   967,393                    (31,703     935,690   

Deferred and recoverable taxes (noncurrent)

   1,622,319                    (98,547     1,523,772   

Trade accounts payable

   2,060,414                  (170,871       1,889,543   

Loans and financing (current)

   670,707                      89,920      760,627   

Derivative financial instruments (current)

   89,920                      (89,920  

Payable and deferred taxes (current)

   736,156                (4,434     (31,703     700,019   

Tax Refinancing Program (Floating)

               4,434            4,434   

Other liabilities (current)

   173,508                  170,871          344,379   

Loans and financing (noncurrent)

   3,993,198                      132,153      4,125,351   

Derivative financial instruments (noncurrent)

   132,153                      (132,153  

Payable and deferred taxes (noncurrent)

   359,220                (713     (98,547     259,960   

Tax Refinancing Program (Non-Floating)

               713            713   

Cost of sales and services

   (6,209,418     29,125                    (6,180,293

Service selling expenses

   (1,364,223     25,863                    (1,338,360

General and administrative expenses

   (1,401,349     44,371          17,411              (1,339,567

Other operating income (expenses), net

   (468,853   138,421      (99,359   (284,347     (17,411           (731,549

Financial expenses

Net

   (597,859   (138,421       324,300                (411,980

Reversal of interest on capital – DRE

   324,300            (324,300            

Deductions from gross revenue

   (5,710,307       284,347                  (5,425,960

 

     Assets     Liabilities     Gross
profit

Total effects

   (130,250   (130,250   313,472

 

Page 20


(Convenience Translation into English from the Original Previously Issued in Portuguese)

Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements

For the Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008—(Continued)

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

(i) Inflation adjustment of contingent liabilities was previously recognized in other operating expenses and started to be recognized as financial expenses.

 

(ii) Previously recorded in ‘Operating costs and expenses’, segregated in the structure costs of services and sales, selling expenses and general and administrative expense, employee and management profit sharing is now recognized in ‘Other operating expenses’.

 

(iii) Previously, taxes on gross revenue were recorded as a deduction of gross revenue. Currently, these taxes are recognized as other operating expenses in the consolidated financial statements.

 

(iv) Interest on capital declared to shareholders is recorded under financial expenses. Its reversal in 2008, however, was stated in the line prior to Net income. Starting the current year, the reversal is stated under financial expenses, in a separate line account.

 

(v) Share-based compensation, a benefit granted to officers, was previously recognized in ‘General and administrative expenses’ and started to be recognized in ‘Other operating expenses’, disclosed in a specific line item.

 

(vi) Taxes in installments part of this program were previously recognized in ‘Deferred and payable taxes’ and started to be recognized in a specific line item of the balance sheet as Tax Refinancing Program.

 

(vii) These amounts were previously recognized in ‘Trade accounts payable’, in the balance sheet, and started to be disclosed in ‘Other liabilities’.

 

(viii) Deferred income tax and social contribution were recognized in deferred and recoverable taxes or deferred and payable taxes, depending on the origin of the tax determined. Currently they are accounted for at their net amount in ‘Deferred and recoverable taxes’.

 

(ix) Derivatives were previously stated in a specific line account of the balance sheet. Correctly these amounts are included in loans and financing.

3. SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING PRACTICES

Significant accounting practices adopted in the preparation of the financial statements are as follows:

(a) Cash and cash equivalents

Comprise cash, bank, and highly liquid short-term investments, immediately convertible to known cash amounts, and are stated at fair value at the balance sheet date, do not exceed their market value, and their classification is determined as shown in item (b) below.

 

Page 21


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

(b) Short-term investments

Classified according to their purpose as: (i) trading securities; (ii) held-to-maturity; and (iii) available-for-sale.

Trading securities are measured at fair value and their effects are recognized in income. Held-to-maturity investments are measured at cost plus income earned, less the allowance for adjustment to probable realizable value, when applicable. Available-for-sale investments are measured at fair value and their effects are recognized in valuation adjustments to equity, when applicable.

(c) Trade accounts receivable

Receivables from telecommunications services are stated at the tariff or service amount on the date they were provided and do not differ from their fair value. Service receivables include receivables from services provided and not billed by the balance sheet date, whose amount is calculated based on the measurements made on balance sheet date or estimates considering historic performance. Taxes are also calculated on an accrual basis. Receivables from sales of handsets and accessories are stated at the sales prices and recorded when the products are delivered and accepted by the customers.

Charges of past-due bills are recognized when the bill of the first billing cycle subsequent to the payment of the past-due bill is issued.

(d) Allowance for doubtful accounts

An allowance for write-down to the recoverable value is recorded when there is objective evidence that the Company will not be able to collect all the amounts due within the original terms of its receivables.

The criterion adopted for recording the allowance for doubtful accounts takes into consideration the calculation of the actual loss percentages incurred on each maturity of accounts receivable, from when receivables are past-due for more than 60 days, increasing progressively, as follows:

 

Past-due receivables

   % loss
accrued

From 1 to 60 days

   Zero

From 61 to 90 days

   40

From 91 to 120 days

   60

From 121 to 150 days

   80

Over 150 days

   100

 

Page 22


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

In the year ended December 31, 2008, the criterion adopted for recording the allowance for doubtful accounts takes into consideration the calculation of the actual loss percentages incurred on each maturity of accounts receivable. Future losses on the current receivables balance are estimated based on these loss percentages.

(e) Inventories

Segregated and classified as follows:

 

   

Maintenance material inventories classified in current assets in accordance with the period in which they will be used are stated at average cost, not exceeding replacement cost;

 

   

Inventories for plant expansion, classified under property, plant and equipment, are stated at average cost of purchase and are used to expand the telephone plant; and

 

   

Inventories of goods for resale, classified in current assets are stated at average cost of purchase, basically represented by handsets and accessories. For handsets and accessories, adjustments to probable realizable value are recorded in those cases in which the purchases are made at amounts exceeding sales prices. These losses are considered efforts to gain new customers. Recoverable losses are recognized for obsolete inventories.

(f) Investments

Investments in subsidiaries are accounted for under the equity method, plus unamortized goodwill if based on the appreciation of the assets. Other investments are stated at cost, less an allowance for adjustment to realizable value, when applicable.

(g) Property, plant and equipment

Stated at costs of purchase or construction and includes the appreciation arising from the corporate restructuring (see note 1(b)), less accumulated depreciation. Historical costs include expenses directly attributable to the acquisition of assets. Financial charges on obligations financing assets and construction works in progress are capitalized.

Subsequent costs are included in the carrying amount of the asset, as appropriate, only when those assets generate economic benefits in the future and can be reliably measured. The residual balance of the replaced asset is written off. Maintenance and repair costs are recorded in income (loss) for the period when they are incurred and are capitalized only when they clearly represent an increase in installed capacity or the useful lives of the assets.

Assets under finance leases are recorded in property, plant and equipment, as prescribed by CVM Resolution 554/2008, at the lower of fair value or the present value of the minimum lease payments, from the initial date of the agreement.

Depreciation is calculated on a straight-line basis, based on the estimated economic useful lives of the assets, which are annually reviewed by the Company.

 

Page 23


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

(h) Intangible assets

Stated at cost, less accumulated amortization and the allowance for impairment losses, when applicable.

Consist basically of regulatory permits for the use of radiofrequency and the provision of Personal Mobile Services (SMP), software use rights and goodwill on the acquisition of investments, calculated based on expected future economic benefits.

Amortization of intangible assets is calculated under the straight-line method and considers, in the case of: (i) permit terms – the effective term of the permit, and (ii) software – a maximum period of five years. Goodwill calculated based on expected future earnings is not amortized from 2009.

(i) Impairment of long-lived assets

An assessment is performed annually or whenever events or changes in circumstances indicate that the carrying amount of an asset or group of assets may not be recoverable. Long-lived assets may be identified as assets which have indefinite useful lives and assets subject to depreciation and amortization (property, plant and equipment and intangible assets). Impairment losses, if any, are recognized in the amount by which the carrying amount of an asset exceeds its recoverable value. Recoverable value is the higher of fair value less cost to sell and value in use. In order to be tested for impairment, the assets are grouped into the smallest identifiable group for which there are cash generating units (CGUs), and projections are made based on discounted cash flows, supported by expectations on the Company's operations in its various business segments.

CGUs are the Company’s operating segments as they are the smallest separable cash generating units.

Net Present Value (NPV) projections for the CGUs are prepared taking into consideration the following assumptions:

 

   

Entity-related information sources: evidence of obsolescence or damage, discontinuation plans, performance reports, etc.; and

 

   

Outside information sources: fair values of the assets, technologic environment, market environment, economic environment, regulatory environment, legal environment, interest rates, return rates on investments, market value of Company shares, etc.

The recovery of these assets is supported by projections for assets with infinite useful lives. Additionally, according to Company tests, there are no evidences of impairment to result in the realization of projections for assets with finite useful lives.

(j) Discount to present value

The Company values its financial assets and financial liabilities to identify instances of applicability of the discount to present value.

 

Page 24


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

In general terms, when applicable, the discount rate used is the average return of investments for financial assets or interest charged on Company borrowings financial liabilities. The contra entry is the asset or liability that originated the financial instrument, when applicable, and the deemed financial charges are allocated to income (loss) using the rate used for their calculation.

The Company concluded that there are no assets and liabilities recorded as of December 31, 2009 and 2008 subject to the discount to present value, in view of the following: (i) their nature; (ii) short-term realization of certain balances and transactions; and (iii) absence of cash assets and cash liabilities with embedded or disclosed interest. When financial instruments are measured at the amortized costs, they are adjusted for inflation at the related contractual interest.

(k) Impairment of financial assets

The Company measures at the balance sheet date whether there is objective evidence that financial assets or a group of financial assets is impaired. A financial asset or group of financial assets is considered impaired when there is objective evidence, as a result of one or more events that occurred after the initial recognition of the asset, that the estimated future cash flows have been impacted.

(l) Loans and financing

Stated at amortized cost, plus inflation adjustment of exchange rate changes and interest incurred through the balance sheet date.

Transaction costs incurred are measured at amortized cost and recognized in liabilities, as a reduction to the balance of loans and financing, and are expenses over the contract term.

The Company and its subsidiaries do not use hedge accounting.

(m) Derivative financial instruments

We contract derivatives to mitigate the exposure to market risks arising from changes in exchange rates on foreign currency-denominated debts and, therefore, are classified in line account ‘Loans and financing’.

Derivatives are initially recognized at market value on the date a derivative contract is entered into and are subsequently measured at fair value. Changes in the fair value of any of these derivatives are recorded directly in the statement of operations.

(n) Reserve for contingent liabilities

Recorded for contingent risks assessed by management and the Company’s in-house and outside legal counsel as probable loss, based on the expected outcome of ongoing lawsuits.

 

Page 25


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

(o) Employee benefits

Benefits offered are as follows:

 

 

Pension plans – the private pension plans and other postretirement benefits sponsored by the Company for the benefit of its employees are managed by three foundations. Contributions are determined based on actuarial calculations, when applicable, and charged to income (loss) on the accrual basis.

The Company sponsors defined benefit and defined contribution plans. In the defined contribution plan, the sponsor makes fixed contributions to a fund managed by a separate entity. The sponsor does not have the legal or constructive obligation of making additional contributions, in the event the fund lacks sufficient assets to pay all employees the benefits related to the services provided in the current period and prior periods. The contributions are recognized as employee benefit expenses as incurred.

The obligation recognized in the balance sheet as regards the defined benefit pension plans presenting a deficit, corresponds to the present value of the benefits defined at the balance sheet date, less the fair value of the plan’s assets. The defined benefit is annually calculated by independent actuaries, who use the projected unit credit method. The present value of the defined benefit is determined by discounting the estimated future cash outflows, using the projected inflation rate plus long-term interest. After the acquisition of BrT, on January 8, 2009, management started to review and reconcile the accounting practices and estimates of the Company and its parent, which was completed at the end of 2009, and the Company started to use the recognition of actuarial gains and losses under the corridor approach.

 

 

Stock Options – The Company has a stock option plan for its management and employees, and options granted are settled in shares. The fair value of the services received from employees in exchange for stock options is determined based on the fair value of the stock options, established on grant date.

Until the change in Company control, in January 2009, the Company maintained a stock option plan for its officers and employees for the purchase of shares of its parent at the time BrT Part, classified as settled in shares and cash. These options were fully exercised in the current year as a result of the change in the control of the Company.

The fair value of the services received from employees and management in exchange for stock options is recognized as expenses during the vesting period. The Company reviews the estimate of the number of options expected to be exercised and recognizes the impacts of this review in income or loss. The options settled in shares are recorded as an expense as a contra entry to an increase in shareholders’ equity.

 

 

Employee profit sharing – the accrual includes the employee profit sharing program and is accounted for on the accrual basis and involves all eligible employees, proportionately to the period of time worked in the year, according to the Program’s rules. The amount, which is paid by April of the year subsequent to the year profit sharing is accrued, is determined based on the target program established with the employees’ unions, under a collective bargaining agreement, pursuant to Law 10101/00 and the bylaws.

 

Page 26


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

(p) Use of estimates

The preparation of financial statements requires Management to make estimates to record certain assets, liabilities and other transactions. The financial statements include, therefore, estimates related to the useful lives of property, plant and equipment, the recoverable amount of long-lived assets, the reserve for contingent liabilities, the calculation of the provisions for income tax, the fair value measurement of financial instruments, and the calculation of the employee benefits. Actual results could differ from those estimates.

(q) Revenue recognition

Revenues refer mainly to the amount of the payments received or receivable from sales of services in the regular course of the Company's activities. Revenue is stated at the gross amount, less approximate taxes, returns and discounts.

Revenue is recognized when it can be reliably measured, it is probable that future economic benefits will be transferred to the Company, the transaction costs incurred can be measured, the risks and rewards have been substantially transferred to the buyer, and certain specific criteria of each of the Company's activities have been met.

Service revenue is recognized when services are provided. Local and long distance calls are charged based on time measurement according to the legislation in effect. The services charged based on monthly fixed amounts are calculated and recorded on a straight-line basis. Prepaid services are recognized as advances from customers and recognized in revenue as they are used by the customers.

Revenue from sales of payphone cards (Public Use Telephony (TUP)), cell phones and accessories is recognized when these items are delivered and accepted by the customers. Discounts on services provided and sales of cell phones and accessories are taken into consideration in the recognition of the related revenue. Revenues involving transactions with multiple elements are identified in relation to each one of their components and the recognition criteria are applied on an individual basis. Revenue is not recognized when there is significant uncertainty as to its realization.

(r) Expense recognition

Expenses are recognized on the accrual basis, considering their relation with revenue realization. Prepaid expenses relating to future years are deferred.

(s) Financial income and expenses

Financial income is recognized on the accrual basis and comprises interest on receivables settled after due date, gains on short-term investments and gains on derivatives. Financial expenses consist of interest and other charges on loans, financing, derivative contracts, and other financial transactions.

Interest on capital to be attributed to mandatory minimum dividends is recorded as financial expenses and reversed to retained earnings, as in substance it consists of allocation of net income.

 

Page 27


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

To avoid impacting financial ratios and allow the comparability between presented periods, the reversals are being presented under financial expenses, thus annulling its impacts.

(t) Income tax and social contribution – current and deferred

Income tax and social contribution on income are recorded on the accrual basis. Said taxes attributed to temporary differences and tax loss carryforwards are recorded in assets or liabilities, as applicable, only under the assumption of future realization or payment. The Company prepares technical studies that consider the future generation of taxable income, according to management exaltations, considering the continued operations. Future earnings are compared to the nominal value of recoverable taxes over a period limited to ten years and reduces the deferred tax credit as it identifies that future taxable income sufficient for the partial or total utilization of deferred taxes is less than probable. The technical studies are updated annually and the tax credits are adjusted based on the results of these reviews.

(u) Accounting for government grants and disclosure of government assistance

Government grants are recorded in income (loss) for the year as a reduction of related expenses.

(v) Earnings (loss) per share

Earnings (loss) per share are calculated based on the amount of outstanding shares at the balance sheet date. Outstanding shares are represented by the total shares issued, less the shares held in treasury.

 

Page 28


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

4. OPERATING REVENUE

 

     COMPANY    CONSOLIDATED
     2009    Reclassified
2008
   2009    Reclassified
2008

Fixed telephone service

           

Local service

   6,482,188    6,552,637    6,480,886    6,549,741

Connection fees

   17,239    10,919    17,239    10,919

Subscriptions

   3,887,870    3,675,872    3,887,986    3,675,529

Fixed

   742,783    922,171    741,469    919,765

Fixed to Mobile – VC1

   1,818,659    1,926,237    1,818,547    1,926,096

Rentals

   1,597    1,135    1,606    1,129

Other

   14,040    16,303    14,039    16,303

Long-distance service

   2,546,168    2,858,961    2,543,726    2,852,611

Intra-sector fixed calls

   752,084    834,620    752,080    834,586

Intraregional (intra-sector) fixed calls

   215,171    247,348    215,175    247,235

Intraregional fixed calls

   203,313    232,180    203,307    232,176

VC2

   733,448    782,384    731,865    778,771

Fixed originated calls

   285,815    300,398    285,482    300,386

Mobile originated calls

   447,633    481,986    446,383    478,385

VC3

   611,443    719,682    610,591    717,098

Fixed originated calls

   296,871    353,816    296,834    353,770

Mobile originated calls

   314,572    365,866    313,757    363,328

International

   30,709    42,747    30,708    42,745

Interconnection

   466,776    436,343    357,521    373,810

Fixed to fixed

   189,719    210,150    189,250    209,957

Mobile to fixed

   277,057    226,193    168,271    163,853

Assignment of means

   462,434    537,652    382,350    449,409

Public telephony

   351,569    474,656    351,569    474,656

Supplementary services, Smart network and advanced telephony

   547,423    419,679    546,288    417,234

Other

   27,204    32,207    23,598    30,713
                   

Total fixed telephone service

   10,883,762    11,312,135    10,685,938    11,148,174
                   
            Continues

 

Page 29


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

... continued

 

    
     COMPANY     CONSOLIDATED  
     2009     Reclassified
2008
    2009     Reclassified
2008
 

Mobile telephone service

        

Telephone

       1,997,267      1,894,397   

Subscriptions

       439,854      401,746   

Calls made

       641,791      642,109   

Call surcharge

       1,995      5,499   

Roaming

       19,774      16,437   

Interconnection

       644,530      662,238   

Value added services

       225,766      154,434   

Other services

       23,557      11,934   

Sale of goods

       114,324      225,670   

Cell phones

       82,710      221,522   

Electronic cards – Brazil Chip, accessories and other goods

       31,614      4,148   
                

Total mobile telephone service

       2,111,591      2,120,067   
                

Data communication and other services

        

Data communication

   4,274,029      3,076,102      4,525,642      3,249,938   

Other core business services

   5,613      7,502      448,742      488,963   
                        

Total data communication and other services

   4,279,642      3,083,604      4,974,384      3,738,901   
                        

Gross operating revenue

   15,163,404      14,395,739      17,771,913      17,007,142   

Deductions from gross revenue

   (6,208,444   (4,747,840   (6,893,351   (5,425,960

Taxes

   (3,486,534   (3,683,187   (3,935,302   (4,105,194

Other deductions

   (2,721,910   (1,064,653   (2,958,049   (1,320,766

Net operating revenue

   8,954,960      9,647,899      10,878,562      11,581,182   

 

Page 30


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

5. COST OF SALES AND SERVICES AND OPERATING EXPENSES

Cost of sales and services

 

     COMPANY     CONSOLIDATED  
     2009     Reclassified
2008
    2009     Reclassified
2008
 

Interconnection

   (2,012,970   (2,151,933   (2,025,529   (2,202,660

Depreciation and amortization

   (1,000,377   (1,245,623   (1,528,809   (1,683,112

Outside services

   (934,635   (783,594   (1,101,379   (970,645

Rentals and insurance

   (280,521   (296,785   (386,452   (395,008

Connection means

   (191,973   (205,776   (128,526   (143,434

Personnel

   (132,643   (129,236   (397,001   (338,489

Concession Agreement Extension Fee - ANATEL

   (71,038   (65,578   (71,038   (65,578

Supplies

   (72,807   (60,483   (75,559   (64,073

Cost of handsets and other

       (86,838   (236,603

Other costs

   (22,788   (20,996   (104,467   (80,691
                        

Total

   (4,719,752   (4,960,004   (5,905,598   (6,180,293
                        

Selling expenses

 

     COMPANY     CONSOLIDATED  
     2009     Reclassified
2008
    2009     Reclassified
2008
 

Allowance for doubtful accounts

   (450,862   (301,956   (549,602   (370,242

Outside services

   (453,607   (423,269   (539,099   (546,989

Personnel

   (124,937   (163,914   (176,085   (237,650

Rentals and insurance

   (12,954   (24,324   (29,078   (49,838

Depreciation and amortization

   (2,719   (3,070   (8,802   (9,164

Supplies

   (2,141   (1,214   (81,692   (90,844

Other expenses

   (2,541   (459   (7,177   (33,633
                        

Total

   (1,049,761   (918,206   (1,391,535   (1,338,360
                        

General and administrative expenses

 

     COMPANY     CONSOLIDATED  
     2009     Reclassified
2008
    2009     Reclassified
2008
 

Outside services

   (547,528   (710,723   (672,511   (803,746

Depreciation and amortization

   (361,855   (215,936   (442,933   (291,479

Personnel

   (202,664   (164,362   (294,517   (220,049

Rentals and insurance

   (13,457   (15,241   (20,441   (19,875

Supplies

   (1,972   (2,849   (3,253   (3,693

Other expenses

   (715   (599   (1,153   (725
                        

Total

   (1,128,191   (1,109,710   (1,434,808   (1,339,567
                        

 

Page 31


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

6. OTHER OPERATING INCOME (EXPENSES), NET

 

     COMPANY     CONSOLIDATED  
     2009     Reclassified
2008
    2009     Reclassified
2008
 

Other operating income

        

Proceeds from the settlement of litigation (i)

     169,885        169,885   

Rental of operational infrastructure and other

   129,816      121,040      89,693      86,975   

Fines

   93,913      90,460      107,676      103,395   

Recovery of expenses on pension funds

   40,479      61,104      40,479      61,104   

Court settlements with telecom companies

     21,517        21,403   

Technical and administrative services

   49,357      63,829      50,674      60,639   

Recovery of taxes and recovered expenses

   193,557      81,700      212,918      145,084   

Income from write-off of property, plant and equipment

   18,100      6,364      89,947      18,836   

Grants received

   4,154      4,751      9,024      15,284   

Income from write-off of maintenance/resale inventories

   2,387        1,169     

Reversal of allowance for realizable value of property, plant and equipment

   45        3,403     

Other income

   13,407        17,146      29,523   
                        

Total

   545,215      620,650      622,129      712,128   
                        

Other operating expenses

        

Reserve for contingent liabilities

   (3,316,626   (557,124   (3,339,706   (573,065

Pension fund reserves

   (5,817   (81,324   (5,817   (81,324

Employee and management profit sharing

   (30,995   (80,333   (45,243   (99,359

Taxes (except on gross revenue, income tax and social contribution)

   (179,403   (246,527   (324,874   (429,979

Fines

   (78,854     (94,336  

Write-off of property, plant and equipment

   (22,038   (35,586   (78,300   (40,103

Endowments and sponsorships

   (14,642   (23,283   (15,824   (23,006

Write-off of maintenance/resale inventories

   (120   (392   (6,866   (2,202

Write-off of allowance for investment losses

     (497     (497

Amortization of goodwill on acquisition of investments

     (22,073     (82,291

Court costs

   (48,803   (58,597   (49,911   (59,430

Share-based compensation

     (17,411     (17,411

Allowance for realizable value of property, plant and equipment

       (2,573  

Loss on investments

     (1,269     (35,010

Other expenses

   (62,029   (334   (76,155  
                        

Total

   (3,759,327   (1,124,750   (4,039,605   (1,443,677
                        

Total other operating income (expenses), net

   (3,214,112   (504,100   (3,417,476   (731,549
                        

 

(i) Refer to the amount received as a result of the Litigation Settlement and Termination Instrument entered into by the Company, its subsidiary BrT Celular and parent company, Opportunity Fund/Banco Opportunity and its related companies, and TMAR. This settlement met the common interest of the parties above, committed to create a favorable situation for the change in control of Brasil Telecom, as discussed in note 1.

 

Page 32


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

7. FINANCIAL INCOME (EXPENSES)

 

     COMPANY     CONSOLIDATED  
     2009     Reclassified
2008
    2009     Reclassified
2008
 

Financial income

        

Inflation adjustment of escrow deposits

   253,652      203,282      255,798      204,842   

Interest and inflation adjustment on other assets

   54,619      50,810      10,813      80,832   

Income from short-term investments

   44,618      41,227      145,832      206,441   

Financial discounts obtained

   2,483      476      12,324      692   

Income from derivative transactions

   (2,039   31,500      (2,039   31,889   

Interest and inflation adjustment on intercompany loans

   41,291        73,727     

Interest and inflation adjustment on taxes

   34,395      98,432      40,597      113,492   

Other (i)

   3,893      5,703      39,145      59,002   
                        

Total

   432,912      431,430      576,197      697,190   
                        

Financial expenses

        

Interest on loans payable to third parties

   (247,302   (264,781   (204,689   (267,195

Inflation adjustment and exchange rate changes third-party borrowings

   187,034      (231,451   186,257      (231,593

Expense on derivative transactions

   (98,891   54,391      (98,891   54,408   

Interest on debentures

   (140,873   (134,933   (140,873   (134,933

Interest and inflation adjustment on other liabilities

   (70,989   (112,006   (177,276   (242,078

Inflation adjustment of reserve for contingent liabilities

   (199,796   (131,098   (210,505   (138,421

Interest on taxes

   (95,823   (53,527   (104,885   (62,025

Withholding income tax (IRRF) on financial transactions and banking fees

   (2,663   (14,702   (3,053   (16,046

Interest and commissions on intercompany loans repayable

   (52,105   (51,487   (94   —     

Interest on capital payable

     (324,300     (324,300

Reversal of interest on capital

     324,300        324,300   

Exchange rate variation on foreign investments

       (49,869   (37,347

Other

   (31,204   (31,656   (53,668   (33,940
                        

Total

   (752,612   (971,250   (857,546   (1,109,170
                        

Total financial expenses, net

   (319,700   (539,820   (281,349   (411,980
                        

 

(i) Other financial income consists basically of inflation adjustment of amounts recoverable related to Arrangement 69/1998 (ICMS).

8. DEFERRED INCOME TAX AND SOCIAL CONTRIBUTION

Taxes on income encompass the income tax and the social contribution on net income. The income tax rate is 25% and the social contribution rate is 9%, generating aggregate taxation of 34%.

In the year ended December 31, 2009, we paid R$446,888 (2008 – R$643,367) of income tax and social contribution on a consolidated basis, of which R$426,785 (2008 – R$619,923) refer to tax calculated by the Company and its subsidiaries and R$20,103 (2008 – R$23,444) to taxes withheld on third parties.

 

Page 33


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

The provision for income tax and social contribution is broken down as follows:

 

     COMPANY     CONSOLIDATED  
     2009     2008     2009     2008  

Current taxes

   (448,012   (569,228   (449,903   (637,908

Income tax and social contribution

   (448,012   (569,228   (449,903   (637,908

Deferred taxes

   828,543      35,318      861,418      86,440   
                        

Total

   380,531      (533,910   411,515      (551,468
                        
     COMPANY     CONSOLIDATED  
     2009     Reclassified
2008
    2009     Reclassified
2008
 

Income before taxes and profit sharing

   (1,523,220   1,563,726      (1,552,204   1,579,433   

Income of companies not subject to income tax and social contribution calculation (i)

       (3,170   (8,704

Total taxed income

   (1,523,220   1,563,726      (1,555,374   1,570,729   

Business income tax (IRPJ) and social contribution on net income (CSLL)

        

IRPJ + CSLL taxed income (10%+15%+9%=34%)

   517,895      (531,667   528,827      (534,048

Equity in subsidiaries

   (15,866   (17,793    

Tax effects of interest on capital

     103,297        103,297   

Permanent exclusions (additions)

   77,078      (88,938   77,274      (122,912

Utilization of tax loss carryforwards

       19,088      13,098   

Unrecognized deferred tax assets

   (88,081     (98,149   (3,198

IRPJ/CSLL effect on goodwill (IN 319/99 - CVM)

   (36,736     (36,736  

Taxes in Installments of Law 11941/09

   (83,369     (84,754  

Other

   9,610      1,190      5,965      (7,706

IRPJ/CSLL effect on statement of operations

   380,531      (533,910   411,515      (551,468

 

(i) Income of subsidiaries that do not recognize income tax and social contribution on tax loss carryforwards because they do not have any prospects that they will be recovered.

The financial statements for the year ended December 31, 2009 were prepared considering the best management estimates regarding the tax treatment under the criteria set out in the Transitional Tax Regime (RTT).

9. CASH, CASH EQUIVALENTS AND SHORT-TERM INVESTMENTS

The cash equivalents and the short-term investments made by the Company and its subsidiaries, in the years ended December 31, 2009 and 2008, are classified as held for trading and are measured at their fair values.

(a) Cash and cash equivalents

 

     COMPANY    CONSOLIDATED
     2009    Reclassified
2008
   2009    Reclassified
2008

Cash and banks

   106,117    150,160    174,896    167,838

Cash equivalents

   599,719    430,818    1,542,545    1,310,720
                   

Total

   705,836    580,978    1,717,441    1,478,558
                   

 

Page 34


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

     COMPANY    CONSOLIDATED
     2009    Reclassified
2008
   2009    Reclassified
2008

Exclusive Investment Funds

   599,207    248,198    1,134,355    562,537

CDB (i)

   512       319,767   

Private securities

      182,620       639,160

Investments Abroad

         88,423    109,023

Cash Equivalents

   599,719    430,818    1,542,545    1,310,720

 

(i) CDB – Certificates of deposit (CD)

(b) Short-Term Investments

 

     COMPANY    CONSOLIDATED
     2009    Reclassified
2008
   2009    Reclassified
2008

Exclusive investment funds

   118,476    135,672    381,951    561,867

Short-term investments

   118,476    135,672    381,951    561,867

Current

   118,476    135,672    381,951    561,867

(c) Exclusive investment funds portfolio

All investment funds where BrT and its subsidiaries invest resources are group unique funds, where, on December, 31, 2009, BrT has nearly 48% (2008 – 24%), BrT Celular 32% (2008 – 29%) and the other subsidiaries hold 20% (2008 – 47%) of these funds’ units.

The composition of the consolidated exclusive funds is shown below:

 

     Consolidated Balances of
Exclusive Investment Funds
     2009    2008

Repurchase Operations

   807,224    542,950

Private securities

   325,022    19,587

Government securities

   1,585   

Others

   524   

Securities classified as Cash Equivalents

   1,134,355    562,537

Government securities

   347,789    371,036

Private securities

   34,162    190,831

Securities Classified as Short Term Short-term investments

   381,951    561,867

Total Applied on Exclusive Funds

   1,516,306    1,124,404

The Company has placed short-term investments in exclusive investment funds in Brazil and abroad, for the purpose of generating cash remuneration for the Company, with benchmark CDI in Brazil and Libor in foreign.

 

Page 35


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

10. TRADE ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE

 

     COMPANY     CONSOLIDATED  
     2009     2008     2009     2008  

Services billed

   1,468,513      1,411,893      1,652,530      1,589,911   

Services not yet billed

   784,098      889,574      852,406      954,353   

Sales of goods

   2,126      159      54,412      60,249   

Subtotal

   2,254,737      2,301,626      2,559,348      2,604,513   

Provision for Doubtful Debts

   (485,359   (342,543   (567,207   (394,423

Services Rendered

   (485,359   (342,543   (562,344   (389,377

Sales of goods

       (4,863   (5,046
                        

Total

   1,769,378      1,959,083      1,992,141      2,210,090   
                        

Not yet due

   1,503,605      1,563,740      1,670,805      1,776,216   

Overdue, with delay of:

        

01 to 30 Days

   351,420      394,218      390,579      428,620   

31 to 60 Days

   110,253      107,666      129,197      125,636   

61 to 90 Days

   74,555      69,690      92,318      79,852   

91 to 120 Days

   55,914      47,440      71,829      54,354   

Above to 120 Days

   158,990      118,872      204,620      139,835   
                        

Total

   2,254,737      2,301,626      2,559,348      2,604,513   
                        

As disclosed in note 3(d), the Company changed its accounting estimate on the allowance for doubtful accounts, in line with the estimate adopted by its indirect parent company TMAR. This change in estimate generated a consolidated increase in the allowance for doubtful accounts by approximately R$53,985 and net loss for the first half totaling R$38,541, net of taxes.

Past-due receivables are subject to a 2% fine on total debt, recorded under other operating income and collection of monthly prorated arrears interest of 1%, recorded under financial income and recognized when the first bill is issued after the payment of the past-due bill.

The Company can block call origination after 30 days past due, and block call origination and receiving after 60 days past due, and remove the terminal from the customer after 90 days past due, provided the customers is notified 15 days in advance. After the terminal is removed, which usually takes place after 95 and 110 days past due, the name of the nonperforming customer is sent to credit reporting agencies.

The changes to the SMP Regulation went into effect on February 13, 2008, as approved by ANATEL Resolution 477/2007. This Resolution changed the default rules, as detailed below:

 

   

full blocking starts after 45 days, i.e., 30 days after partial blocking and no longer 15 days; and

 

   

the total term to terminate the contract is now 90 days after the maturity of the bill, as the other deadlines were not changed.

11. DUE FROM RELATED PARTIES

 

       COMPANY
       2009      2008

Loan with Subsidiaries

     28,590     

Interest on Loan

     418     
             

Total

     29,008     
             

Current

     29,008     

 

Page 36


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

BrT signed in May 20, 2009 a loan agreement with the subsidiary BrT Call Center. The maturity of this loan is the date May 20, 2010. The remuneration corresponds to the rate of 115% of the CDI.

 

 

       COMPANY      CONSOLIDATED
       2009      2008      2009      2008

Private debentures – principal

     1,200,000           1,500,000     

Interest on private debentures

     142,313           174,750     
                           

Total

     1,342,313           1,674,750     
                           

Noncurrent

     1,342,313           1,674,750     

Private debentures issued by TMAR

Company Rights acquired by merger

The Company Rights refer to the subscription by the merged BrT Part, on February 17, 2009, of 11,648 nonconvertible debentures, issued by TMAR - indirect parent company, for a unit price of R$103, totaling R$1,200,000. These debentures mature in five years, on December 11, 2013. These debentures yield interest equivalent to the DI compounded by spread of 4.0% per year, to be paid on the debentures’ maturity.

The subscription carried out by BrT Part was transferred to the Company, as a consequence of the BrT Part’s merger by the Company.

Subscription by BrT Part

On March 12, 2009, BrT Celular subscribed 2,885 nonconvertible debentures, issued by TMAR, for a unit price of R$104, totaling R$300,000. These debentures mature in five years, on December 11, 2013. These debentures yield interest equivalent to the DI compounded by spread of 4.0% per year, to be paid on the debentures’ maturity.

12. DEFERRED AND RECOVERABLE TAXES

 

     COMPANY    CONSOLIDATED
     2009    Revision
2008
   2009    Revision
2008

ICMS to be recovered (i)

   433,222    503,325    593,764    644,121

IR on temporary differences (ii)

   2,900,852    612,307    2,977,040    669,334

CS on temporary differences (ii)

   1,039,883    192,792    1,065,049    209,770

IR on tax loss (ii)

   2,649       582,933    540,801

CS on negative basis (ii)

         217,078    198,495

IR to be recovered (iii)

   230,540    12,152    297,335    74,345

CS to be recovered (iii)

   15,699    1,504    29,910    6,207

IRRF/CSLL - Tax withheld at source

   11,124    5,583    36,052    12,904

Other recoverable taxes

   218,339    62,753    254,933    103,485
                   

Total

   4,852,308    1,390,416    6,054,094    2,459,462
                   

Current

   711,360    672,655    1,001,255    935,690

Noncurrent

   4,140,948    717,761    5,052,839    1,523,772

 

Page 37


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

 

(i) The recoverable ICMS (Tax on Goods and Services) is a result mainly, of credits established on the acquisition of goods from fixed asset, which compensation with this tax fiscal obligations occur up to 48 months, according Supplementary Law 102/2000.
(ii) BRT and its subsidiaries record its deferred tax assets arising from temporary differences, of tax losses and negative basis of social contribution, in accordance with the provisions of Deliberation CVM 273/1998 and CVM Instruction 371/2002.

As follows, there are presented periods of assessment expectation of assets from deferred taxes relating to income tax and social contribution on net income, whose origins are based on temporary differences between the outcome accounting system by competence system and tax outcome, as well as tax loss on the negative basis of social contribution, where existing. The outcoming deadlines are based on technical study founded in future tax profits generated from fiscal years where temporary differences become expenditure fiscally deductible, which consider the actions taken by the Company aiming at broadening the customer basis for activities in the expansion phase. The values recognized in the financial statements are based on technical studies submitted annually to the approval of management and board of directors as well as to the examination of fiscal board.

 

     COMPANY    CONSOLIDATED

2010

   288,168    341,669

2011

   400,844    460,788

2012

   416,649    500,920

2013

   374,650    480,003

2014

   340,160    444,052

From 2015 to 2017

   805,905    1,047,936

From 2018 to 2020

   552,501    802,224

From 2021 to 2023

   458,704    458,704

From 2024 onwards

   305,803    305,802

Total

   3,943,384    4,842,098

Current

   288,168    341,668

Noncurrent

   3,655,216    4,500,430

The expected recovery in the value of R$917,408 onwards year 2020 arises from:

(i) R$86,663 related to the provision to cover the actuarial deficiency of pension plans, whose obligation is being financially settled in accordance with the maximum remaining period of 12 years, according to the delimited term established by SPC – Secretary of Complementary Previdence. Not withstanding the time limit set by SPC and in accordance with the estimated future profits tax, the Company is able to compensate its taxes on a period less than ten years, if the Company fully anticipate the debt settlement; and (ii) R$830,745 related to na amount of depreciation of the goodwill based upon the STFC license, with tax utilization foresee for years 2020 to 2025.

On December 31, 2009, in accordance with Instruction CVM 319/1999, as amended by Instruction CVM No 349/2001, in the context of the mergers described in Note 1 (b), the balance of STFC license recorded in the Company by the mergers of Copart 2 and BrT Part totaling R$2,215,540 was transferred from intangible assets for deferred and recoverable taxes, R$138,679 in current and R$2,076,861 in noncurrent.

 

Page 38


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

Additionally, on September 30, 2009 the Company recorded income tax and deferred social contribution, resulting from the corporate restructuring completed on that date (Note 1(b)), in which fair value of (R$6,867,895) regarding to STFC licenses of the Company was recorded, net of provisions to keep the integrity of the net assets (R$4,412,903 ), totaling R$2,454,993 , being R$1,671,554 of income tax and R$601,759 of social contribution.

For the direct and indirect subsidiaries that do not have a profitable record and/or any expectation of generating sufficient taxable income over the next ten years, the tax credits in relation to income tax losses and a negative social contribution base, along with tax credits on timing differences, have not been fully recognized. The credits without accounting recognition totalled R$106,215 (2008 - R$124,715).

 

(iii) The Company and its subsidiaries record IRRF credits on financial applications, loan, dividends and other that are used as deduction in time assessments.

13. ESCROW DEPOSITS

The balances of escrow deposits referring to contingencies with possible and remote loss risks are as follows:

 

     COMPANY     CONSOLIDATED  
     2009     2008     2009     2008  

Civil

   3,960,523      2,781,859      3,991,946      2,802,545   

Labor

   568,407      505,753      576,521      512,183   

Tax

   564,073      346,538      576,926      351,302   
                        

Subtotal

   5,093,003      3,634,150      5,145,393      3,666,030   
                        

Reduction per re-classification for:

        

Reserve for contingent liabilities

   (2,766,551   (509,448   (2,781,111   (520,287

Deferred and payable taxes

   (398,194   (240,393   (407,985   (241,778
                        

Total

   1,928,258      2,884,309      1,956,297      2,903,965   
                        

Current

   351,501      673,834      359,561      678,972   

Noncurrent

   1,576,757      2,210,475      1,596,736      2,224,993   

Escrow deposits bounded to liabilities provisions are presented in deductible manner of those provisions (see Notes 19 and 21).

14. INVESTMENTS

 

       COMPANY      CONSOLIDATED
       2009      2008      2009      2008

Equity evaluated by Earnings

     3,951,475      3,994,870          

Equity evaluated by Acquisition Cost (i)

     3,703      3,703      5,203      3,703

Incentives Tax, net for losses provisions

     130           130     

Other Investments

     23      23      41      41
                           

Total

     3,955,331      3,998,596      5,374      3,744
                           

 

Page 39


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

 

(i) Investments stated at cost are represented by interests obtained by converting shares or capital quotas of tax incentives in regional FINOR/FINAN funds, Laws for Incentives for Information Technology Companies and Audiovisual Law. They are predominantly composed of shares of other telecommunications companies located in the regions covered by these regional incentives.

Main data related to equity evaluated by patrimonial equivalence method are the following:

 

     On December 31, 2009 – COMPANY
                 Number of shares (thousand)    Equity interest %
                 shares    Quotas   

Subsidiaries

   Shareholders’ equity
(unsecured liabilities)
    Net income (loss)
for the year
    Common
Shares
   Preferred
shares
      Total Capital    Voting
Capital

Brt Celular

   2,926,231      (21,322   4,473,443          100    100

BrTI

   362,888      9,811      685,154          100    100

BrT CS

   318,943      5,934            272,443,966    99.99    99.99

BrT Multimídia

   305,679      7,352            399,253    90.46    90.46

VANT

   (239   (2,620   141,511,999          99.99    99.99

BrT Call Center

   19,635      545      11,270    22,370       99.99    99.99

BrT Card

   8,135      19            7,499,999    99.99    99.99

iG Brasil

   259,425      11,957      112,047,365          13.65    13.65

NTPA

   3,461      425            32,645,507    99.99    99.99

NTIN

   270      43      1,003          100    100
     On December 31, 2008 – COMPANY
                 Number of shares (thousands)    Equity interest %

Subsidiaries

   Shareholders’ equity     Net income (loss)
for  the year
    Shares    Quotas    Total Capital    Voting
Capital
       Common
Shares
   Preferred
shares
        

Brt Celular

   2,926,231      (147,946   4,473,443          100    100

BrTI

   332,993      (70,245   685,154          100    100

BrT CS

   266,307      106,666            272,443,966    99.99    99.99

BrT Multimídia

   281,376      43,088            399,253    90.46    90.46

VANT

   4,462      (3,257   141,511,999          99.99    99.99

BrT Call Center

   21,880      (5,119   11,270    22,370       99.99    99.99

BrT Card

   7,676      176            7,499,999    99.99    99.99

iG Brasil

   240,709      34,503      112,047,365          13.65    13.65

 

Page 40


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

     Equity in subsidiaries     Investment Value    Provision for
Unsecured
Liabilities
 

Subsidiaries

   2009     2008     2009    2008    2009  

Brt Celular

   (147,946   (125,952   2,926,321    3,074,177   

BrTI

   29,895      (70,245   362,888    332,993   

BrT CS

   52,636      106,666      318,943    266,307   

BrT Multimídia

   21,984      38,977      276,514    254,530   

VANT (i)

   (4,701   (3,257      4,462    (239

BrT Call Center

   (2,245   (5,119   19,635    21,880   

BrT Card

   459      6,421      8,135    32,845   

iG Brasil

   2,554      176      35,399    7,676   

NTPA

   694        3,460      

NTIN

   6        270      
                            
   (46,664   (52,333   3,951,475    3,994,870    (239
                            

 

(i)

As defined in Article. 12 of CVM Instruction no 247/1996, a provision is made in the current liabilities to cover the controlled uncovered liabilities.

15. PROPERTY, PLANT AND EQUIPMENT

 

     COMPANY  
     Works in
progress
    Automatic
switching
equipment
    Transmission
equipment and
Other (1)
    Infrastructure     Buildings     Others
Assets
    Total  

Cost of Property, plant and equipment (Gross Amount)

              

Balance at January 01, 2008

   256,484      4,991,975      13,276,064      3,627,061      1,004,231      1,483,655      24,639,470   

Additions

   995,535      2,412      226,642      8,093      1,906      34,789      1,269,377   

Write-offs

   (38,644   (4,614   (110,299   (20,834   (1,714   (27,727   (203,832

Transfers

   (663,713   77,431      407,177      86,219      4,364      44,370      (44,152

Balance at December 31, 2008

   549,662      5,067,204      13,799,584      3,700,539      1,008,787      1,535,087      25,660,863   

Additions

   451,730      984      85,805      1,943      775      18,759      559,996   

Corporate Restructuring (i)

     309,467      1,356,648      101,683      263,905      128,685      2,160,388   

Write-offs

   (5,354   (6,514   (181,239   (19,542   (177   (26,321   (239,147

Transfers

   (790,448   48,018      408,326      122,978      16,591      55,703      (138,832

Balance at December 31, 2009

   205,590      5,419,159      15,469,124      3,907,601      1,289,881      1,711,913      28,003,268   

Accumulated Depreciation

              

Balance at January 01, 2008

     (4,858,151   (11,133,301   (2,484,735   (550,245   (1,202,784   (20,229,216

Depreciation Expenses

     (62,493   (819,750   (224,983   (29,385   (110,648   (1,247,259

Write-offs

     4,951      102,587      19,377      669      21,434      149,018   

Transfers

       1        (25   (102   (126

Balance at December 31, 2008

     (4,915,693   (11,850,463   (2,690,341   (578,986   (1,292,100   (21,327,583

Depreciation Expenses

     (66,509   (797,997   (183,147   (27,044   (101,656   (1,176,353

Corporate Restructuring (i)

     (29,432   (129,026   (9,758   (20,472   (58,636   (247,324

Write-offs

     6,268      171,186      17,235      47      22,784      217,520   

Transfers

     21,740      15,350      (20,442   (849   (8,914   6,885   

Balance at December 31, 2009

     (4,983,626   (12,590,950   (2,886,453   (627,304   (1,438,522   (22,526,855

Net Property, plant and equipment

              

Balance at January 01, 2008

   256,484      133,824      2,142,763      1,142,326      453,986      280,871      4,410,254   

Balance at December 31, 2008

   549,662      151,511      1,949,121      1,010,198      429,801      242,987      4,333,280   

Balance at December 31, 2009

   205,590      435,533      2,878,174      1,021,148      662,577      273,391      5,476,413   

Annual Rate of Depreciation (Average)

     20.0   18.4   8.5   4.6   20.0  

 

(1) The transmission equipment and other include transmission equipment and data communication.

 

Page 41


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

    CONSOLIDATED  
    Works in
progress
    Automatic
switching
equipment
    Transmission
equipment and
Other (1)
    Infrastructure     Buildings     Others
Assets
    Total  

Cost of Property, plant and equipment (Gross Amount)

             

Balance at January 01, 2008

  460,353      5,156,452      14,690,865      3,893,822      1,042,997      1,746,167      26,990,656   

Additions

  1,586,465      2,412      286,234      9,028      10,444      65,631      1,960,214   

Write-offs

  (41,951   (4,614   (110,684   (21,176   (1,758   (29,641   (209,824

Transfers

  (994,910   148,854      593,369      113,961      4,420      57,086      (77,220

Balance at December 31, 2008

  1,009,957      5,303,104      15,459,784      3,995,635      1,056,103      1,839,243      28,663,826   

Additions

  1,000,926      984      120,390      3,138      3,588      27,867      1,156,893   

Corporate Restructuring (i)

    309,467      1,356,648      101,683      263,905      128,685      2,160,388   

Write-offs

  (7,775   (11,750   (331,167   (20,621   (177   (31,028   (402,518

Transfers

  (1,461,106   114,296      765,722      172,405      16,728      77,233      (314,722

Balance at December 31, 2009

  542,002      5,716,101      17,371,377      4,252,240      1,340,147      2,042,000      31,263,867   

Accumulated Depreciation

             

Balance at January 01, 2008

    (4,929,268   (11,880,114   (2,582,885   (565,291   (1,342,664   (21,300,222

Depreciation Expenses

    (103,591   (1,081,424   (251,787   (34,184   (147,526   (1,618,512

Write-offs

    4,951      109,023      19,407      703      22,986      157,070   

Transfers

      369        (25   (382   (38

Balance as of December 31, 2008

    (5,027,908   (12,852,146   (2,815,265   (598,797   (1,467,586   (22,761,702

Depreciation Expenses

    (117,261   (1,086,011   (213,906   (31,070   (144,734   (1,592,982

Corporate Restructuring (i)

    (29,432   (129,026   (9,758   (20,472   (58,636   (247,324

Write-offs

    10,599      270,568      17,377      47      26,242      324,833   

Transfers

    21,740      15,350      (20,443   (848   (9,086   6,713   

Balance at December 31, 2009

    (5,142,262   (13,781,265   (3,041,995   (651,140   (1,653,800   (24,270,462

Net Property, plant and equipment

             

Balance at January 01, 2008

  460,353      227,184      2,810,751      1,310,937      477,706      403,503      5,690,434   

Balance as of December 31, 2008

  1,009,957      275,196      2,607,638      1,180,370      457,306      371,657      5,902,124   

Balance as of December 31, 2009

  542,002      573,839      3,590,112      1,210,245      689,007      388,200      6,993,405   

Annual Rate of Depreciation (Average)

    20.0   18.4   8.5   4.6   20.0  

 

(1) The transmission equipment and other include transmission equipment and data communication.

 

(i) The corporate restructuring of the year ended on December 31, 2009 is represented, substantially, by the amount of goodwill paid on BrT Part´s control acquisition, founded in fixed asset increasing, in the original amount of R$2,105,290. The goodwill was recorded in the Company (parent company), by merger of Copart 2 and BrT Part, as disclosed in Note 1 (b), on July 31 and September 30, 2009, respectively, in the accounts representing the respective assets, net of amortization recognized in companies incorporated, in accordance with the Instruction CVM 319/1999.

Additional information

In accordance with ANATEL’s concession contracts, property, plant and equipment that belong to the Company that are considered essential to provide the services authorized in said contracts are considered revertible assets and are part of the respective concession’s cost. These assets will automatically revert to Anatel upon expiration of any concession contract that is not renewed.

 

Page 42


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

As of December 31, 2009, the residual balance of these escheatable assets was R$4,189,204 (2008 - R$3,001,610) and comprised the assets and installations forming part of the work in progress, switching and transmission equipment and terminals for public use, equipment that is part of the external network, electrical equipment and systems and operational support equipment.

Since September 30, 2009, the Company changed the useful life of property, plant and equipment, and is in accordance with the Evaluation Report, issued by an expert company, where are evident the acquired assets fair value, and the liabilities assumed in BrT Part control acquisition, causing effects in the BrT financial statements after October 1, 2009.

In December 2009, the appraisal report on economic useful life cycle of goods of the fixed assets was approved by the Board of the Company and its subsidiaries. The result of this evaluation caused effects on Company and its subsidiaries’ financial statements, since January 1, 2010.

 

SEGMENT

   ECONOMIC USEFUL
CYCLE (new)

BUILDING AND IMPROVEMENTS

   37 years

MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENTS:

  

Switching, Transmission and Data – Frame

   20 years

Switching, Transmission and Data – Other equips.

   10 years

Infrastructure (Electric power and Climatization) – Towers

   25 years

Infrastructure (Electric power and Climatization) – Other equipments

   20 years

Infrastructure (Other segments)

   VU original

(from 0 to 25 years)

Cable

   10 years

Programming/Software/Upgrades

   VU original

(5 years)

VU – Life cycle

In the year ended on December 31, 2009, financial charges and transaction costs to builds in progress were capitalized totaling R$27,700 by the Company and R$47,220 in consolidated statements.

 

Page 43


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

16. INTANGIBLE ASSETS

 

     COMPANY  
     Goodwill     Intangible
assets
    Data
processing
systems
    Others     Total  

Cost of intangible assets (gross amount)

          

Balance at January 01, 2008

   122,974      7,984      1,699,869      109,276      1,940,103   

Additions

     165,044      59      1,628      166,731   

Write-off

       (6,182   (32,896   (39,078

Transfers

     (164,953   227,547      (11,702   50,892   

Balance at December 31, 2008

   122,974      8,075      1,921,293      66,306      2,118,648   

Additions

     6,833      1,150      1,116      9,099   

Corporate Restructuring (i)

   9,391        148      3,738      13,277   

Write-off

       (448     (448

Transfers

     35,797      121,304      (24,138   132,963   

Balance at December 31, 2009

   132,365      50,705      2,043,447      47,022      2,273,539   

Accumulated amortization

          

Balance at January 01, 2008

   (88,402     (1,214,829   (52,871   (1,356,102

Amortization Expenses

   (22,954     (208,317   (8,173   (239,444

Write-off

       6,080      32,896      38,976   

Transfers

       (11,962   12,087      125   

Balance at December 31, 2008

   (111,356     (1,429,028   (16,111   (1,556,495

Amortization Expenses

       (182,661   (5,936   (188,597

Corporate Restructuring(i)

   (9,391     (148   (3,728   (13,267

Write-off

       448        448   

Transfers

       (22,127   15,243      (6,884

Balance at December 31, 2009

   (120,747     (1,633,516   (10,482   (1,764,745

Net intangible assets

          

Balance at January 01, 2008

   34,572      7,984      485,040      56,405      584,001   

Balance at December 31, 2008

   11,618      8,075      492,265      50,245      562,203   

Balance at December 31, 2009

   11,618      50,705      409,931      36,540      508,794   

Annual Rate of Amortization (Average)

       20.0   20.0  

 

Page 44


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

     CONSOLIDATED  
     Goodwill     Intangible
assets
    Data
processing
systems
    Regulatory
licenses
    Others     Total  

Cost of intangible assets (gross amount)

            

Balance at January 01, 2008

   498,813      9,565      2,174,233      387,871      106,396      3,176,878   

Additions

   16,254      264,861      6,654      489,985        777,754   

Write-off

   (19,078     (6,182     (76,288   (101,548

Transfers

     (260,656   349,893      6,148      (11,007   84,378   

Balance at December 31, 2008

   495,989      13,770      2,524,598      884,004      19,101      3,937,462   

Additions

     6,833      2,699        1,798      11,330   

Corporate Restructuring (i)

   9,391        148        3,738      13,277   

Write-off

       (459       (459

Transfers

   32,458      86,922      241,065      (153   (23,947   336,345   

Balance at December 31, 2009

   537,838      107,525      2,768,051      883,851      690      4,297,955   

Accumulated amortization

            

Balance at January 01, 2008

   (335,058     (1,428,050   (88,407   (88,686   (1,940,201

Amortization Expenses

   (101,016     (308,985   (50,506   (5,880   (466,387

Write-off

   18,941        6,080        76,287      101,308   

Transfers

       (12,050     12,086      36   

Balance at December 31, 2008

   (417,133     (1,743,005   (138,913   (6,193   (2,305,244

Amortization Expenses

       (329,029   (58,227   (306   (387,562

Corporate Restructuring (i)

   (9,391     (148     (3,728   (13,267

Write-off

       10          10   

Transfers

   (26,507     (3,121     10,140      (19,488

Balance at December 31, 2009

   (453,031     (2,075,293   (197,140   (87   (2,725,551

Net intangible assets

            

Balance at January 01, 2008

   163,755      9,565      746,183      299,464      17,710      1,236,677   

Balance at December 31, 2008

   78,856      13,770      781,593      745,091      12,908      1,632,218   

Balance at December 31, 2009

   84,807      107,525      692,758      686,711      603      1,572,404   

Annual Rate of Amortization (Average)

       20.0   6.70   20.0  

Goodwill

The Company and its subsidiaries have goodwill in investments acquisition, founded in the expectation of future profitability, for the businesses acquired based on 10 years estimation made by expert companies.

In September 2009, the analysis of recoverable amounts (impairment test) of goodwill recorded at investments acquisition was done, being not disclosed losses, according chart below:

 

     Asset balance on
09/30/2009
   Goodwill allocated
to CGUs
   Base for
recoverable
amount
evaluation
   Value in use

Cash Generating Unit (CGU)

           

Internet provider – Region II

   74,063    73,143    147,206    849,384

Multimedia – Region II (*)

   229,792    7,351    237,143   

Other (*)

   64,546    4,313    68,859   

Total

   368,401    84,807    453,208    849,384

 

(*) The assessment was not performed due to the immateriality of goodwill value and absence of indicative loss of asset value.

 

Page 45


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

Regulatory licenses

 

     CONSOLIDATED
     Start    Finish    Acquisition
cost

Concession / Permit

        

Radio frequencies and SMP BrT Mobile Region 2 (2G)

   12/18/2002    12/17/2017    191,502

Radio frequencies and SMP BrT Mobile Region 2 (2G)

   05/03/2004    12/22/2017    28,624

Radio frequencies and SMP BrT Mobile Region 2 (3G)

   04/29/2008    04/30/2023    488,235

Interests capitalized to BrT Celular permits

         90,633

Other Licenses

         84,857
          

Total

         883,851
          

Other information

The appraisal report for evaluation of economic life cycle of items on the intangible assets was approved by the Company Board of Directors and its subsidiaries in December 2009. The result of this assessment has not promoted change in life cycle of items of intangible assets.

17. LOANS AND FINANCING

(Including Debentures)

 

     COMPANY     CONSOLIDATED  
     2009     Reclassified
2008
    2009     Reclassified
2008
 

Loans

   484,354      660,726      210     

Interests provisioned on loans

   32,893      51,487      17     

Financing

   2,943,123      3,386,888      3,484,692      3,701,110   

Interest provisioned on financings

   53,566      89,134      71,964      93,685   

Debentures

   1,080,000      1,080,000      1,080,000      1,080,000   

Interest provisioned on debentures

   10,586      11,906      10,586      11,906   

Commercial leasing

   4,132      12,698      4,132      12,698   

Interest provisioned on commercial leases

   423      1,731      423      1,731   

Transaction costs

   (10,750   (14,671   (11,175   (15,152
                        

Total

   4,598,327      5,279,899      4,640,849      4,885,978   
                        

Current

   1,502,029      1,468,344      1,003,352      760,627   

Noncurrent

   3,096,298      3,811,555      3,637,497      4,125,351   

 

Page 46


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

Loans and financings per nature

 

     COMPANY     CONSOLIDATED
     2009     2008     2009     2008     TIR     MATURITY
DATE

BNDES

   2,247,450      2,394,498      2,737,935      2,655,191       

Local currency

   2,209,761      2,303,552      2,700,246      2,564,245      11.7   Feb/2011 to
Dec/2018

Currency basket, including dollar

   37,689      90,946      37,689      90,946      2.6   Apr/2011

Financial institutions

   550,377      858,213      619,860      916,293       

Local currency

   56,927      67,968      126,410      126,049      5.9   Apr/2011 à
Dec/2033

Foreign currency

   493,450      790,245      493,450      790,244      1.0   Jul/2010 à
Feb/2014

Mutual with subsidiary – local currency

   517,248      712,213      227        12.9  

Public debentures

   1,090,586      1,091,906      1,090,586      1,091,906      13.3   Jun/2013

Derivative financial instruments

   198,280      222,073      198,280      222,073        Mar/2011

Trade accounts payable – foreign currency

   581      1,238      581      1,238      1.0   Feb/2014

Commercial leasing

   4,555      14,429      4,555      14,429      11.3   Oct/2010
                            

Subtotal

   4,609,077      5,294,570      4,652,024      4,901,130       
                            

Transaction costs

   (10,750   (14,671   (11,175   (15,152    
                            

Total

   4,598,327      5,279,899      4,640,849      4,885,978       
                            

Transaction Costs per Nature

 

     COMPANY    CONSOLIDATED
     2009    2008    2009    2008

BNDES

           

Local currency

   426    521    851    1,002

Financial institutions

           

Foreign currency

   8,302    11,550    8,302    11,550

Public debentures

   2,022    2,600    2,022    2,600
                   

Total

   10,750    14,671    11,175    15,152
                   

Current

   3,922    3,922    3,977    3,977

Noncurrent

   6,828    10,749    7,198    11,175

In December 2009, the Company and its subsidiary BrT Celular closed a financing contract with the BNDES (National Economical and Social Development Bank), totaling R$1,389 million, to finance the expansion and improvement of network quality and the accomplishment of regulatory obligations, scheduled for the period 2009 to 2011. This contract is divided in two sub-loans: (i) sub-loan A, bearing TJLP (long-term interest rate) plus 3.95% p.a.; and (ii) sub-loan B, fixed remuneration in 4.50% p.a. A disbursement in R$300 million was done in December 2009, related to this financing contract. The financial charges are due on a three-month basis until December 2011, becoming monthly for the period January 2012 to December 2018. The principal is payable in 84 monthly installments, from January 2012 to December 2018.

 

Page 47


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

In February 2008, BrT Celular closed a financing contract totaling R$259 million with the BNDES, with effective disbursement of R$259 million destined for the adequacy of mobile telecommunications network and growth in traffic, with the implementation of new services to improve the quality of service to customers. The average cost of this facility is remunerated at the variation of TJLP, plus an interest of 3.52% p.a. The financial charges are due on a three-monthly basis, until September 2010, becoming monthly from October 2010 to September 2017. The principal is payable in 84 monthly installments, from October 2010 to September 15, 2017.

In November 2006, BrT requested a financing at BNDES totaling R$2,004 million, with effective disbursement of R$2,055 million, remunerated at TJLP plus 4.3% p.a. The financial charges are due on a quarterly basis, until May 2009, becoming monthly for the period June 2009 to May 2014. The principal is payable in 60 monthly installments, as from June 2009, overdoing the last one on May 15, 2014.

Also in November 2006, BrT contracted a financing with the BNDES of R$100 million, with effective disbursement of R$55 million, remunerated at TJLP plus 2.3% p.a. The principal is payable in 60 monthly installments, as from June 2009, overdoing the last one on May 15, 2014.

Public Debentures:

Fourth public issue: On June 1, 2006, BrT performed its fourth public issue in 108,000 debentures not convertible in shares and with no covenant clause, in unitary nominal amount of R$10.00, in total of R$1,080,000. The payment will be in seven years, finishing in June 1, 2013. The payments corresponds to DI Rate capitalized in spread of 3.5% p.a. and payment periodicity is half-yearly. The amortization, which should contemplate indistinctly all debentures, shall be annually from June 1, 2011, in three installments of 33.3%, 33.3% and 33.4% of unitary nominal value, respectively. On the balance sheet date, there were no debentures of this emission in treasury.

Commercial leasing

The liabilities resulting from financial leasing contracts have payment periods of 36 months and are recorded by their present value. The financial charges, which refer substantially to the variations in the CDI rate, are recorded in the net income over the leasing period.

The current value of future minimum payments is distributed as follows:

 

     COMPANY AND CONSOLIDATED
     2009    2008

Less than one year

   4,555    10,674

More than one and less than five years

      3,755
         

Total

   4,555    14,429
         

 

Page 48


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

Repayment schedule

The repayment of long-term debt has been scheduled as follows:

 

     COMPANY    CONSOLIDATED
     2009    2008    2009    2008

2010

      842,962       858,779

2011

   904,950    880,806    948,631    924,443

2012

   802,508    728,078    878,904    771,715

2013

   803,554    729,013    879,950    772,650

2014

   537,711    623,532    611,907    664,969

2015 onwards

   47,575    7,164    318,105    132,795
                   

Total

   3,096,298    3,811,555    3,637,497    4,125,351
                   

Debt composition by currency / index

 

     COMPANY     CONSOLIDATED  
     2009     2008     2009     2008  

TJLP

   2,190,330      2,303,552      2,675,114      2,564,245   

CDI

   1,612,388      1,818,549      1,095,367      1,106,336   

US Dollars

   371,371      509,490      371,371      509,490   

Yen

   122,659      281,992      122,659      281,992   

Derivative financial instruments

   198,280      222,073      198,280      222,073   

UMBNDES – Currency basket of BNDES

   37,689      90,946      37,689      90,946   

INPC

   7,341      7,321      45,782      31,607   

Pre-fixed rate

   69,019      60,647      105,762      94,441   

Funding costs

   (10,750   (14,671   (11,175   (15,152
                        

Total

   4,598,327      5,279,899      4,640,849      4,885,978   
                        

The transaction costs will be incorporated to the results of subsequent fiscal years, as follows:

Transaction costs merger to result timeline

 

     COMPANY    CONSOLIDATED
     2009    2008    2009    2008

2010

      3,922       3,977

2011

   2,609    2,609    2,664    2,664

2012

   2,171    2,171    2,226    2,226

2013

   1,883    1,883    1,937    1,937

2014

   165    164    220    220

2015

         55    55

2016 onwards

         96    96
                   

Total

   6,828    10,749    7,198    11,175
                   

Guarantees

The BNDES financing contracts have warranty in receivables from the Company and its subsidiary BrT Celular, and surety from parent company, totaling R$2,726,734.

Certain BrT and BrT Celular loans and financing obtained were collateralized by receivables from the provision of fixed telephony services and the endorsement of BrT and BrT Part. After the merger of BrT Part by the Company, the sureties and guarantees rendered by firm were replaced, by creditors’ approval, by TNL sureties and guarantees. The TNL’s surety and guarantees rendering was duly approved by the Company´s Board of Directors.

 

Page 49


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

The public debentures had unsecured guarantees, through a surety granted by BrT Part. Under the indenture, as guarantor and jointly liable party, BrT Part committed to guarantee and pay all the obligations assumed by the subsidiaries with the debenture holders. After BrT Part merger by BrT, the debenture holders of 5th issue approved the replacement of BrT Part guarantor by TNL, totaling R$1,080,000. The TNL’s guarantee rendering was duly approved by the Company’s Board of Directors.

“Covenants”

The financing agreements with BNDES and other financial institutions and Debentures from the Company and BrT Celular issues demand the accomplishment of financial indexes.

In November 2009, the financing agreements with BNDES, from the Company and BrT Celular were added, and, currently the covenants evolution for agreements occur half-yearly, in June and December using for calculation the TNL consolidated numbers. On December 31, 2009, all indexes for agreements done with BNDES were accomplished.

On December 31, 2009, the Company failed to comply with the determined EBITDA/Financial Expenses and Debt/EBITDA indexes, defined in agreement with JBIC and in Debenture of fifth issue. However, JBIC waived their related rights of December 31, 2009. On March 11, 2010, Fifth issue debentureholders approved the non-applicability of indexes above referred up to June 2010, inclusive.

BrT estimates that, on March 31, 2010, the covenant from “Interests Coverage” and “Debt Coverage” will not be accomplished; defined in agreement between BrT and JBIC. As a result, the company already started the process to request to JBIC renounce this right, for this period. However, there is no guarantee of success for this request. At the end of the fiscal year 2009 the value of this long-term debt was transferred to the Floating, totaling R$40,575.

18. PERMITS AND CONCESSIONS PAYABLE

 

     COMPANY    CONSOLIDATED
     

    2009    

   2008    2009    2008

Mobile Personal Service (i)

         702,000    707,999

STFC Concessions

      65,578       65,578

Other Permits (ii)

         7,088    10,082
                   

Total

      65,578    709,088    783,659
                   

Current

      65,578    99,240    160,074

Noncurrent

         609,848    623,585

 

Page 50


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

(i) The permits of the Personal Mobile Service are represented by agreements entered into by BrT Celular with ANATEL in 2002 and 2004, totaling R$220,119, to exploit SMP services during a fifteen-year period in the same area where BrT has a concession for fixed telephony. Of the amount contracted, 10% was paid on the execution date and the remaining balance was fully recognized in the subsidiary’s liabilities, to be paid in equal, consecutive annual installments, with maturities scheduled from 2009 to 2010 (two installments) and from 2010 to 2012 (three installments), depending on the fiscal years the agreements were executed. The debit balance is adjusted by the variation of IGP-DI, plus 1% per month. The adjusted balance of these permits is R$114,629 (2008 – R$199,110).

On April 29, 2008, BrT Celular obtained new permits for exploitation of the 3G network, totaling R$488,235, paying on the execution date 10% of the total amount, and the remaining debit balance payable from 2010 to 2015 (in six installments). The debit balance is adjusted by the Telecommunications Services Índex (IST), plus 1% per month. The adjusted balance of these 3G network permits is R$587,341 (2008 – R$508,889).

 

(ii) The amount of other licenses belongs to BrT Multimídia and relates to the usage rights of radiofrequency blocks associated to the exploitation of multimedia communication services. Contracted amount was R$9,110 and on this obligation occur IGP-DI floating plus 1% per month. The balance of this obligation finishing will occur in three yearly installments, equal and successive, always in May.

19. DEFERRED AND PAYABLE TAXES

 

     COMPANY    CONSOLIDATED
     2009    Reclassified
2008
   2009    Reclassified
2008

ICMS

   469,015    477,756    540,384    555,137

ICMS Agreement 69/1998

   3,345    213    3,566    213

PIS and COFINS

   253,348    262,955    303,987    301,323

Federal income tax payable

      21,731    20,570    24,835

Social contribution payable

   10,826    5,190    17,978    6,423

Deferred Income tax and Social contribution – Law 8,200/1991

   6,503    6,871    6,503    6,871

Others

   40,561    39,539    72,425    65,177
                   

Total

   783,598    814,255    965,413    959,979
                   

Current

   550,164    582,205    691,861    700,019

Noncurrent

   233,434    232,050    273,552    259,960

The taxes are presented net of judicial deposits of R$407,985 (2008 – R$241,778) in consolidated.

 

Page 51


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

20. TAX FINANCING PROGRAM

Tax installment established by Law 11,941 /2009

The Company and some of its subsidiaries contracted the New Financing Program of Federal Tax Debts, regulated by the Law 11,941/2009, including debts with the National Treasury and the INSS due until November 30, 2008.

In accordance with the provisions of Article 1, V, §9 of the referred Law, the companies must maintain regular payments of the new installments which may be excluded from the program if three of them are opened, consecutive or not, or of an installment, if all the others were already paid.

The refinancing was agreed upon in 180 months. In accordance with the referred Law, the companies which contracted the program have to make the minimum monthly payment, once the definitive amount will only be obtained after the debts consolidation by RFB. With the adhesion, the judicial deposits related to the processes transferred to the new program will be converted, according to the applicable law, as income for the Brazilian Government.

The Company and iG Brasil transferred the balances of previous special installments (REFIS and PAES). For this, according to the Law 11941/2009, the companies resettle the respective debts in the amounts referring to the prior moment to the old installments, and, subsequently, they applied the reducers defined in the new law.

In function of the New Financing Program, R$350,729 were recorded in BrT and R$380,412 in the consolidated, from which R$255,992 (BrT) and R$292,731 (consolidated) had already been accrued in the previous programs (REFIS and PAES), in “Taxes to pay” and in “Reserve for contingent liabilities”.

The adhesion to the new program generated impact on the year result, due to: (a) PIS and COFINS expenses, recorded in “Other operational expenses – Taxes”, in the amounts of R$60 in BrT and R$1,139 in the consolidated; (b) IR/CSLL expenses, recorded in “Income Tax and Social Contribution”, in the amounts of R$83,369 in BrT and R$84,754 in the consolidated; and (c) other taxes recorded in “Other operational expenses – Taxes”, in the amounts of R$9,965 in BrT and R$10,676 in the consolidated. The arrears fines were recorded as “Other operational expenses – Expenses with fines”, in the amounts of R$58,801 in BrT and R$63,607 in the consolidated. The debts inflation adjustment was recorded in “Financial expenses – Interest and monetary variation on other liabilities”, in the amounts of R$44,027 in BrT and R$45,977 in the consolidated. Due to the fiscal benefit of fine and interest reduction, the fines were recorded under “Other operation incomes – Recovered expenses”, in the amounts of R$35,263 in BrT and R$38,078 in the consolidated, and the interests were recorded under “Financial Revenues – Others”, in the amounts of R$19,114 in BrT and R$20,509 in the consolidated.

 

Page 52


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

The amounts scheduled under the refinancing program are as follows:

 

     COMPANY    CONSOLIDATED
     2009    Reclassified
2008
   2009    Reclassified
2009

REFIS II – PAES

   4,322    4,381    4,322    5,147

Tax Installment of Law 11,941/2009

   350,729       380,412   
                   

Total

   355,051    4,381    384,734    5,147
                   

Current

   27,704    4,381    29,683    4,434

Noncurrent

   327,347       355,051    713

A breakdown of the refinancing program amounts, showing principal, fines and interest, is presented below:

 

     CONSOLIDATED
     Principal    Fines    Interest    2009
Total
   2008
Total

COFINS

   165,090    13,566    24,891    203,547    269

CPMF

   175    67    190    432   

Income Tax

   67,881    5,445    15,395    88,721    370

Social Contribution

   17,108    1,812    4,921    23,841    63

INSS – SAT

   7,197    1,850    11,363    20,410   

PIS

   38,173    2,825    6,223    47,221    4,445

Others

   343    27    192    562   
                        

Total

   295,967    25,592    63,175    384,734    5,147
                        

21. RESERVE FOR CONTINGENT LIABILITIES

Breakdown of the carrying amount

 

      COMPANY      CONSOLIDATED   
     

Type

   2009     2008     2009     2008  
   Labor         
(i)   

Overtime

   178,277      88,139      180,935      90,466   
(ii)   

Salary differences/Equalization of salary scales

   115,728      50,738      118,309      54,238   
(iii)   

Hazardous work conditions

   101,679      45,158      104,323      47,239   
(iv)   

Claims by outsourced personnel

   77,968      43,617      78,628      44,267   
(v)   

Stability / Reintegration

   75,517      41,607      75,666      41,965   
(vi)   

Contractual Rescissions

   46,771      43,454      50,837      46,825   
(vii)   

Indemnities

   46,493      19,376      49,291      19,902   
(viii)   

Additional post-retirement benefits

   40,246      26,706      40,250      26,706   
(ix)   

FGTS (***)

   30,241      18,005      30,316      18,017   
(x)   

Labor fines

   3,952      1,912      4,050      1,963   
(xi)   

Fees for legal counsel and expert opinions

   2,176      1,570      2,516      1,570   
(xii)   

Employment relationship

   1,769      1,027      2,027      1,249   
(xiii)   

Other Claims

   56,033      32,423      56,502      32,293   
                           
  

Subtotal

   776,850      413,732      793,650      426,700   
                           
  

Bounded judicial deposits

   (378,218   (207,503   (384,950   (213,028
                           
   Total    398,632      206,229      408,700      213,672   
                           
   Tax         
(i)   

ICMS

   448,357      165,063      470,215      3,411   
  

ISS

   1,312      5,112      9,595      183,605   
(ii)   

FUST

       3,801      500   
(ii)   

INSS (Joint responsibility, fees and indemnification amounts)

   280      26,485      280      29,180   
  

ILL

     500        5,436   

 

Page 53


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

(iii)   

Other Claims

   1,453      45,579      2,690      47,734   
  

Subtotal

   451,402      242,739      486,581      269,866   
  

Bounded judicial deposits

   (22,076   (21,069   (23,403   (21,753
   Total    429,326      221,670      463,178      248,113   
   Civil         
(i)   

Corporate Law

   2,664,933      310,038      2,664,933      310,038   
(ii)   

Anatel estimates

   135,166      75,870      138,987      76,197   
(iii)   

Small claims courts

   75,479      13,731      90,449      13,980   
(iv)   

Anatel fines

   59,147      67,911      62,261      72,940   
(v)   

Other Claims

   405,312      259,282      417,745      279,243   
                           
  

Subtotal

   3,340,037      726,832      3,374,375      752,398   
                           
  

Bounded judicial deposits

   (2,366,257   (280,876   (2,372,758   (285,506
                           
   Total    973,780      445,956      1,001,617      466,892   
                           
   Total reserve, net of judicial deposits    1,801,738      873,855      1,873,495      928,677   
   Current    406,893      199,565      433,390      218,297   
   Noncurrent    1,394,845      674,290      1,440,105      710,380   

Breakdown of the claims according to level of risk (consolidated)

 

     CONSOLIDATED
     2009

Risk

   Labor    Tax    Civil    Total

Probable (i)

   408,700    463,178    1,001,617    1,873,495

Possible

   1,128,980    1,778,465    1,256,930    4,164,375

Remote

   487,896    933,430    999,709    2,421,035
                   

Total

   2,025,576    3,175,073    3,258,256    8,458,905
                   

 

(i) Net of judicial deposits

 

     CONSOLIDATED
     2008

Risk

   Labor    Tax    Civil    Total

Probable (i)

   213,672    248,113    466,892    928,677

Possible

   632,838    1,672,260    1,220,372    3,525,470

Remote

   413,913    2,316,591    913,105    3,643,609
                   

Total

   1,260,423    4,236,964    2,600,369    8,097,756
                   

 

(i) Net of judicial deposits

Summary of the changes in the balances of the reserve for contingent liabilities:

 

     COMPANY  
     Labor     Tax     Civil     Total  

Provisions as of 12/31/08

   413,732      242,739      726,832      1,383,303   

Changes through income (loss)

   455,333      304,782      2,756,307      3,516,422   

Monetary correction

   74,564      67,724      57,508      199,796   

Additions, net of reversals

   380,769      237,058      2,698,799      3,316,626   

Increase per Merger of BrT Part

   223      3,306      142      3,671   

Payments

   (92,438   (99,425   (143,244   (335,107

 

Page 54


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

Subtotal I (Provisions) on December 31, 2009

   776,850      451,402      3,340,037      4,568,289   

Bounded judicial deposits as of December 31, 2008

   (207,503   (21,069   (280,876   (509,448

Other variations of judicial deposits

   (170,715   (1,007   (2,085,381   (2,257,103

Subtotal II (Judicial Deposits) as of December 31, 2009

   (378,218   (22,076   (2,366,257   (2,766,551

Balance as of December 31, 2009, less judicial deposits

   398,632      429,326      973,780      1,801,738   

 

     CONSOLIDATED  
     Labor     Tax     Civil     Total  

Provisions as of December 31, 2008

   426,700      269,866      752,398      1,448,964   

Changes through income (loss)

   461,706      312,984      2,775,521      3,550,211   

Monetary correction

   76,393      73,223      60,889      210,505   

Additions, net of reversals

   385,313      239,761      2,714,632      3,339,706   

Increase per Merger of BrT Part

   223      3,306      142      3,671   

Payments

   (94,979   (99,575   (153,686   (348,240

Subtotal I (Provisions) as of December 31, 2009

   793,650      486,581      3,374,375      4,654,606   

Bounded judicial deposits as of December 31, 2008

   (213,028   (21,753   (285,506   (520,287

Other variations of judicial deposits

   (171,922   (1,650   (2,087,252   (2,260,824

Subtotal II (judicial deposits)

   (384,950   (23,403   (2,372,758   (2,781,111

Balance as of December 31, 2009, less judicial deposits

   408,700      463,178      1,001,617      1,873,495   

From total additions, net of reversals, R$3,316,626 refers to the Company and R$3,339,706 to the consolidated.

Summary of Main Effects linked to Constituted Provisions

Labor

 

  (i) Overtime – refers to the claim for payment of salary and premiums increased by alleged overtime hours;

 

  (ii) Salary Differences and Repercussion – refer mainly to claims for salary increases due to alleged noncompliance with trade union agreements. The effects relate to the impact of the salary increase allegedly due on the other amounts calculated based on the employee’s salary;

 

  (iii) Hazardous work conditions – refer to claims for hazardous duty premium, based on Law 7369/1985, regulated by Decree 93412/1986, due to the alleged risk related to employees’ contact with the electric power system, health hazard premium, stand-by hours and transfer premium;

 

  (iv) Joint liability – refers to the claim to assign liability to the Company, filed by outsourced personnel, due to alleged noncompliance with these personnel’s labor rights by their direct employers;

 

  (v) Job reinstatement – claim due to alleged noncompliance with an employee’s special condition which prohibited termination of the employment contract without cause;

 

Page 55


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

  (vi) Contractual Rescissions – refer to the funds allegedly unaccomplished in the contractual termination or their differences;

 

  (vii) Indemnities – refer to values allegedly arising from labor accident, leased vehicles, work disease, damage and provisory stability;

 

  (viii) Additional post-retirement benefits – Differences allegedly due in benefit wage related to contractual rescissions;

 

  (ix) Supplement to FGTS (severance pay fund) fine arising from understated inflation – refers to claims to increase the FGTS indemnity fine as a result of the adjustment of accounts of this fund due to inflation effects.

BrT filed a court action against Caixa Economica Federal in order to ensure the compensation of all values that are paid to this title;

 

  (x) Labor fines – These are fines provided for under the Labor Laws in the event of non or late payment of labor-related items;

 

  (xi) Fees for legal counsel and expert opinions – Refers to disbursements paid to lawyers in the cases that they sponsor the claimants, as well as to experts appointed by the court, when it is necessary for the instruction procedural, of technical expert evidence;

 

  (xii) Employment relationship – These are claims by former employees of contractors, attempting to establish a direct employment link with the Company, on the grounds of unlawful outsourcing and/or elements of a connection, such as direct subordination; and

 

  (xiii) Other claims – Refers to a variety of issues, relating to additional payment for time of service, profit sharing, allowance for travel, among others.

After the acquisition of the Company’s control by Telemar, on January 8, 2009, the Company changed its criterion to determine the likelihood of a probable unfavorable outcome in labor contingencies to align it the criterion used by Telemar, which takes into consideration the merits of the ongoing contingencies. As a result of these amendments, the Company increased the provision for labor processes in R$334,136 (R$220,529, net of fiscal effects) in the year ended on December 31, 2009.

Tax

 

  (i) State Taxes – claim for payment of ICMS (State VAT) on transactions which, in the Company’s view, are not subject to this tax, and discussions regarding ICMS credits taken by the Company, the validity or legality of which is being questioned by the State Tax Authorities. The current management’s and its current legal counsel’s assessment of discussions on ICMS credits taken by the Company, whose validity or legality is challenged by state tax authorities, changed the contingent risk estimated to probable. This estimate change generated an increase in provisions for tax contingencies around R$345,214. In the accumulated outcome until the closure of year the effect was of R$227,841, net of tax effects.

 

Page 56


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

  (ii) Federal Tax – a range of assessments looking for federal taxes and contributions about qualified facts in form allegedly inadequate by the Company or on differences in settlement and calculations of these taxes. The balance decrease totaling R$26,205 occurred in the light of adhesion to the new program Law 11,941/2009, migrating from taxes that were endowed; and

 

  (iii) Other Claims – The balances submitted at yearend of 2009, substantially reduced, compared to 2008, depending on the adhesion to new program Law 11,941/2009, migrating taxes which were conservatively endowed.

Civil

 

  (i) Corporate – CRT – Financial Participation Agreements – the financial participation agreements were governed by Administrative Acts No. 415/1972, 1,181/1974, 1,361/1976, 881/1990, 86/1991 and 1,028/1996. The subscriber held a financial interest in the concessionaire, paying a certain amount which was initially recorded as fund to be capitalized and, later, after the Shareholders’ Meeting approved the increase in capital, was recorded as shareholders’ equity, generating the issuance of shares. The lawsuits filed against CRT, a company that was merged with and into the Company, challenge the manner in which shares were granted to the subscribers based on the abovementioned financial participation agreements.

The Company provisioned for risks involving losses related to these lawsuits, considering certain legal doctrines. Throughout the first half of 2009, court rulings led the Company to review the estimates of provisioned amounts and probability of loss attributed to these lawsuits. The Company, respecting the characteristics of each decision and based on the evaluation of its internal and external legal counsel, changed its assessment from possible loss to probable loss. In the first half of 2009, the Company made additional provisions in a total amount of R$1,153,456, net of tax effects, with an impact of R$761,281 in net income and shareholders’ equity. As described in Note 1 (c), the Company’s Management, with the assistance of its internal and external legal advisors, reviewed the process it uses to assess provisions for contingencies in connection with the financial participation agreements. This review considered additional aspects related to the dates and discussions that guided the final decisions of the existing proceedings, as well as the use of statistical criteria to estimate the amount of the provisions for contingencies. The information used to implement the abovementioned improvements were available as of the date of the calculation of the estimates for the first half of 2009, but had not been considered when calculating the estimate of probable loss. As a result,, the provision was increased in R$2,325,578 during the year 2009, (R$1,534,882, net of tax effects). On December 31, 2009, provisions for civil contingencies related to claims related to rights of holders of financial participation agreements amounted to a total of R$2,664,932. These proceedings are being heard in lower, appellate and supreme courts. The Company and its subsidiaries disclosed, through the Material Fact published on January 14, 2010, a

 

Page 57


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

total adjustment amounting to R$2,535 million for civil contingencies related to claims related to rights of holders of financial participation agreements. The amount then disclosed was not fully recorded, being the amount of R$2,325 million the gross total adjustment recorded in 2009.

 

  (ii) ANATEL estimates – These largely relate to alleged non-compliance with PGMU (General Plan for Universal Access Targets) and PGMQ (General Plan of Quality Targets) obligations.

 

  (iii) Small claims courts – Issues raised by customers, for whom the individual indemnification amounts do not exceed the equivalent of forty minimum wages.

 

  (iv) ANATEL Fines – Refers, substantially, to provisions for fines arise from failures to meet quality targets under the terms of the PGMQ – General Plan of Quality Targets and RIQ – Quality Indicators Regulation.

 

  (v) Other claims – Refer to a large number of ongoing contingencies covering contract rescissions; indemnities of ex-suppliers and contractors, basically, by virtue of litigation where company equipment suppliers proposed against the Company, revision of contractual conditions due to stabilization of economic plans; as well as queries where main contents refer to economic plans, disputes whose main natures are related to contractual breaches, by which Management and its legal advisers attribute loss profit prognoses, among other.

Possible risk contingencies (not provided for)

The Company and its subsidiaries also have a number of proceedings in which the expectation of incurring losses is classified as possible, in the opinion of their legal advisors, and for which no reserve for contingent liabilities have been made.

According to the Company´s management opinion, based on its legal advisers, the main contingencies classified with possible loss expectation are summarized below:

Labor

Refer to issues of diverse complaint applications relating to differences in wages, overtime, hazard pay and risk goodwill, joint liability, among others in the approximate value of R$1,128,980 (2008 – R$632,838).

Tax

The main existing judicial actions are represented by the following objects:

 

(i) ICMS – Diverse assessments of ICMS tax, highlighted among them by two main effects: ICMS collection on certain revenue from services already taxed by ISS or which does not constitute the basis for calculating ICMS, and the employment of credits on acquisition of goods and other supplies, in the approximate amount of R$708,944 (2008 -R$855,630);

 

Page 58


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

(ii)

ISS – alleged incidence on communication secondary services and discussion on the services framework taxed by municipalities in the List of Supplementary Law no 116/2003, amounting to R$282,211 (2008 – R$179,301);

 

(iii) INSS – assessments focusing on addition of items in contribution wage allegedly due by the Company, in the approximate amount of R$285,871 (2008 -R$274,133); and

 

(iv) Federal Taxes – several tax notifications regarding basically the disallowances made on the calculation of taxes, errors in the completion of tax returns, transfer of PIS and COFINS and FUST related to changes in the interpretation of these taxes tax bases by ANATEL. The approximate amount is R$501,439 (2008 – R$487,856).

Civil

The main existing judicial actions are represented by the following objects:

 

(i) Retributions arising from PCT – Telephony Community Program; the plaintiffs seek for retribution related to contracts arising out of PCT. Such cases are in various stages: 1st Degree, Court of Justice and Superior Court of Justice; in the approximate amount of R$595,203 (2008 – R$607,597).

 

(ii) Lawsuits with no binding court decision, whose main effects are associated to questions in relation to network expansion plans, indemnities by immaterial and material damage, collection proceedings, and tendering processes, among others. These questions involve approximately R$661,727 (2008 – R$943,150).

Letters of guarantee

As regards contingent liabilities, the Company has letters of guarantee granted by financial institutions, as supplementary collateral for contingencies in provisional execution to ensure the performance of concession commitments related to licenses granted by ANATEL. The total value of securities contracted by the Company and existing on the closing date of the year corresponds to R$2,339,509 (2008 – R$2,351,546) and R$2,356,120 (2008 – R$2,569,471) concerning the consolidated. The commission charges on these contracts are based on market rates.

a. Contingent Assets

Below are the tax lawsuits filed by the Company to claim refund of taxes paid.

PIS/COFINS (Taxes on revenue): tax lawsuit challenging the enforcement of Law 9718/98, which increased the PIS and COFINS tax basis. The Law covered the period from February 1999 to November 2002 for PIS and from February 1999 to January 2004 for COFINS. In November 2005, the STF (Federal Supreme Court) concluded the judgment of certain lawsuits on the same matter and considered the increase in the tax basis introduced by said Law unconstitutional. Part of the lawsuits filed by the Company and the STFC concessionaires from Region II of the Concession

 

Page 59


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

Plan, merged into the Company in February 2000, became final and unappealable in 2006 as regards the increase in PIS and COFINS tax basis. The Company is awaiting the judgments of the lawsuits filed by the other merged companies, whose likelihood of a favorable outcome in future filing of appeals is regarded as probable by the Company’s legal counsel. The amount attributed to these lawsuits, representing unrecognized contingent assets, was R$18,533 (2008 - R$18,367) and R$19,015 (2008 - R$18,843) for consolidated.

22. SHAREHOLDERS´ EQUITY

(a) Capital

The capital of the Company, which is fully subscribed and paid up, amounts to R$3,731,059 (2008 - R$3,470,758), and is represented by the following shares with nominal value:

 

Types of Shares

   Total Shares    Treasury shares    Shares Outstanding
   2009    2008    2009    2008    2009    2008

Common shares

   203,423,176    249,597,049          203,423,176    249,597,049

Preferred shares

   399,597,370    311,353,240    13,231,556    13,451,400    386,365,814    297,901,840
                             

Total

   603,020,546    560,950,289    13,231,556    13,451,400    589,788,990    547,498,889
                             

 

     2009    2008

Equity Value per Share Outstanding (R$)

   18.81    11.40

The preferred shares held in treasury are excluded from the determination of the book value.

The Company is authorized to increase its capital through the Board of Directors, until the limit of 800,000,000 (eight hundred million) of common or preferred shares, with no obligation to maintain the proportion between them, observing the legal limit of 2/3 for the issuance of preferred shares without voting rights.

By resolution of the Shareholders’ Meeting or Board of Directors’ Meeting, the Company’s capital can be increased through capitalization of retained earnings or reserves previously allocated for this purpose by the Shareholders' Meeting. Under these conditions, the capitalization may be performed without changing the amount of shares.

Capital is represented by common and preferred shares, with no nominal value, and the Company is not required to maintain the current proportion of these types of share on capital increases.

Through deliberation of the General Meeting or of the Board of Directors, the preemptive rights can be excluded for the issuing of shares, subscription bonus or debentures convertible into shares, in the cases provided for in Article 172 of the Brazilian Corporate Law.

The preferred shares have no right to vote, except in the cases of paragraphs 1 to 3 of Article 12 of the by-laws, having ensured priority in receiving the minimum and non cumulative dividend of 6% p.a., calculated on the amount resulting from the division of the capital by the total number of shares, or of 3% p.a., calculated on the amount resulting from the division of the net shareholders’ accounting equity by the total number of shares, whichever is higher.

 

Page 60


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

(b) Treasury Shares

The treasury shares derive from Stock Repurchase Programs carried out from 2002 to 2004. On September 13, 2004, a material event notice was disclosed on the last proposal approved by the Company’s Board of Directors for repurchase of preferred and common shares issued by the Company to be held in treasury, cancelled, or subsequently sold.

The number of treasury shares is as follows:

 

       2009  
       Preferred
shares
     Amount(1)  

Balance as of December 31, 2008

     13,451,400       152,129   

Shares sold

     (219,844    (2,487

Balance as of December 31, 2009

     13,231,556       149,642   

 

(1) Equals the cost of the shares sold.

 

History cost of the purchase of treasury shares in (R$ per share)

     2009      2008

Weighted average cost

     11.31      11.31

Minimum

     10.31      10.31

Maximum

     13.80      13.80

Unit cost considers all stock repurchase programs.

Shares were sold in the year to comply with a Management and Employee Stock Option Program, whose amount was R$3,572 and represented a net gain of R$1,085, which was recorded in a capital reserve.

Market Value of Treasury Shares

The market value of the treasury shares at balance sheet date was as follows:

 

     2009    2008

Shares amount in treasury

   13,231,556    13,451,400

Quotation per share on BOVESPA (R$)

   16.75    13.64

Market value

   221,629    183,477

The table below shows the deduction of the amount of treasury shares from the reserves used in the buyback:

 

     Share subscription
goodwill
    Other capital reserves  
     2009     2008     2009     2008  

Accounting Balance of Reserves

   458,684      458,684      126,372      125,287   

Treasury shares

   (99,822   (99,822   (49,820   (52,307

Balance, net of treasury shares

   358,862      358,862      76,552      72,980   

 

Page 61


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

(c) Capital Reserves

Capital reserves are recognized pursuant to the following practices:

Goodwill Reserve for Share Subscription: results from the difference between the amount paid on subscription and the amount allocated to capital.

Special goodwill reserve for Merger: represents the net amount of the counterpart of the premium amount recorded in the asset, pursuant to provisions of CVM Instruction 319/1999. The reserve can be capitalized insofar the premium originating it is amortized, in benefit of all shareholders.

Donations and subsidies for capital expenditure reserve: constituted due to donations and subventions received before the beginning of the year of 2008, and which contra entry represents an asset received by the Company.

Reserve for Special Tax Refinancing Program of Law 8,200/1991: constituted due to the special tax refinancing program of the permanent asset and which purpose was to compensate distortions of tax refinancing program indexes prior to 1991.

Reserve for Stock Options: account constituted due to share options, granted and acknowledged according to payment plans based on shares and liquidated with net equity instruments.

Interest on works in progress: consist of the counterpart of interest on works in progress incurred up to December 31, 1998 and the funds invested in income tax incentives prior to the beginning of 2008.

Other Capital Reserves: consist of the counterpart of interest on works in progress incurred up to December 31, 1998 and the funds invested in income tax incentives prior to the beginning of 2008.

(d) Earnings reserves

Earnings reserves are recognized pursuant to the following practices:

Legal Reserve: allocation of 5% of the annual profit until the limit of 20% of the realized capital. This allocation is optional in the event that the sum of the legal reserve plus the capital reserves exceeds the capital by 30%. This reserve is only used for increasing capital or offsetting losses.

Capital Expenditure Reserve: formed by the profit balances of the year, adjusted pursuant to Article 202 of Law 6404/1976, and allocated after the payment of dividends. The profit balances of years that contribute to the formation of this reserve were integrally allocated as retained profits by the respective shareholders general meetings, in view of the investment budget of the Company and pursuant to Article 196 of Brazilian Corporate Law. Until the closure of the year of 2007, the income retention for investments remained in the account of retained earnings, in line with Article 8 of CVM Instruction 59 /1986. With the enforcement of Law 11,638/2007, which determines that there should not be balance in the account of retained earnings at yearend, the mentioned income retention became part of this reservation for investments.

 

Page 62


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

(e) Dividends and interest on capital

Dividends are calculated at yearend, pursuant to the Company’s by-laws and the Brazilian Corporate Law. Minimum mandatory dividends are calculated pursuant to Article 202 of Law 6404/1976, and the preferential or priority dividends are calculated pursuant to the provisions of the Company bylaws.

Through deliberation of the Board of Directors, the Company can pay or credit, as dividends, interest on its shareholders’ capital pursuant to art 9, paragraph 7, of Law 9, 249/1995. The paid or credited interests shall be offset with the amount of the mandatory minimum annual dividend, pursuant to Article 43 of the bylaws.

On December 31, 2009, the Company verified a loss in the year of R$1,142,689 and an accumulated loss of R$1,048,421 after considering the prescription of dividends and interest on its equity capital in the year of 2009 of R$11,501, changes in equity of the merger of Brt Part of R$82,637, and the plan of share options of R$130. According to the proposal of the Company´s management, subject to the approval of the General Meeting, the balance of accumulated losses was presented absorbed by the legal reserve totaling R$17,119 and by the investments reserve, totaling R$1,031,302.

Mandatory Minimum Dividends calculated pursuant to Article 202 of Law 6, 404/1976

 

     2009    2008  

Net income (loss) for the year

      1,029,816   

Appropriation to the Legal Reserve

      (51,491

Adjusted Net income

      978,325   
         

Mandatory Dividends (25% of the Adjusted Net income)

      244,581   

Dividends and interest on capital – Interest on capital credited

The Company credited Interest on the Equity Capital to their shareholders during the year of 2008, according to the share position at the date of each executed credit. At the date of the year closure, the credited interest on capital, net of withholding tax, were imputed to the dividends, and is part of the proposal for the allocation of profits approved by the General Meeting of shareholders.

 

     2009    2008  

Credited interest on capital

      324,300   

IRRF – Withholding Tax

      (48,645

Net interest on capital

      275,655   

Provided Dividends, in Complement to interest on capital

     

Total Shareholders Remuneration

      275,655   

Common shares

      125,688   

Preferred shares

      149,967   

 

Page 63


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

Total Remuneration per Share (in reais)

 

       2009      2008

Common shares

          0.503565

Preferred shares

          0.503410

Total shares

          0.503480

23. RISK ANALYSIS AND FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS

Financial Risk Management

The Company´s activities expose it to several financial risks, such as: market risk (including currency risk, interest rate risk on fair value, interest rate risk on cash flows and price risk), credit risk and liquidity risk. The Company uses derivative financial instruments for certain risk exposures.

Risk management is carried out by the Company's treasury officer, in accordance with the policies approved by management. On October 01, 2009, the Board of Directors approved Oi’s Financial Risks Management Policy (“Policy”), which passed to formalize the management of exposal to market risk factors generated by financial transactions of Oi group firms. According to the Policy, market risks are identified based on features of contracted financial transactions and to be contracted at fiscal year. Various scenarios for each one of risk factors are so simulated by statistic models, being base for impacts measurement on Group financial income (expenses). Based on this analysis, Directorship agrees yearly to Management Council, the Risk Guideline to be followed at each fiscal year. The Risk Guideline is equivalent to the worst expected impact of financial income (expenses) of Group net income, 95% of confidence. For proper risk management, according risk guideline, treasury area shall contract hedge instruments, including swap derivative transactions, currencies and options terms. TNL and its subsidiaries do not use derivatives for any other purpose.

After the Policy approval, the Financial Risks Management Committee was created, composed by the CEO, CFO, Technology and Strategy Development Director and Treasury Director of Oi Group. The Committee meets monthly to supervise Policy fitting. Also, monthly, the Board of Directors present to the Management Council a Policy follow up report.

According to their nature, financial instruments may involve known or unknown risks, and the potential of these risks is important, in the best judgment. Therefore, there may be risks with or without guarantees depending on circumstantial or legal aspects.

(a) Fair Value of financial instruments

The Company has evaluated the active market for or effective realizable values (fair value) of financial assets and liabilities by using available information and evaluation methodologies appropriate for each situation. The interpretation of the market data regards the choice of methodologies requires a considerable amount of judgment and the establishment of estimates to reach an amount considered appropriate for each situation. Consequently, the estimates presented may not necessarily indicate the amounts that could be obtained in the active market. The usage of different types of hypotheses to determine the fair value could have a material effect on the amounts obtained.

 

Page 64


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

The method as used to calculate the fair value of the derivative instruments was the discounted future cash flow method associated to each contract, discounted to the market rates in effect at balance sheet date.

For securities traded in active markets, the fair value is equivalent to the amount of the last quotation available at balance sheet date, multiplied by the number of outstanding securities. For contracts whose current terms are similar to those originally contracted or which do not present quotation benchmarks, the fair values are equal to the carrying amounts.

The main assets and liabilities financial instruments are presented as follows:

 

     2009  
          Company     Consolidated  
     Accounting
Measurement
   Carrying
amount
    Fair Value     Carrying
amount
    Fair Value  

Assets

           

Cash and cash equivalents

   Fair Value    705,836      705,836      1,717,441      1,717,441   

Short-term investments

   Fair Value    118,476      118,476      381,951      381,951   

Accounts receivable

   Amortized Cost    1,769,378      1,769,378      1,992,141      1,992,141   

Due from related parties

   Amortized Cost    1,371,321      1,523,456      1,674,750      1,864,563   

Liabilities

           

Trade accounts payable

   Amortized Cost    1,131,439      1,131,439      1,554,278      1,554,278   

Loans and financing

           

Loans and financing

   Amortized Cost    3,309,461      3,384,650      3,351,983      3,430,927   

Debentures

   Amortized Cost    1,090,586      1,135,191      1,090,586      1,135,191   

Derivative Financial Instruments

   Fair Value    198,280      198,280      198,280      198,280   

Tax Refinancing Program

   Amortized Cost    355,051      355,051      384,734      384,734   

Dividends and interest on capital

   Amortized Cost    128,477      128,477      141,253      141,253   

Permits and concessions payable

   Amortized Cost        709,088      709,088   

Shareholders’ equity

           

Treasury shares

   Amortized Cost    (149,642   (221,629   (149,642   (221,629

 

Page 65


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

     Reclassified 2008  
          Company     Consolidated  
     Accounting
Measurement
   Carrying
amount
    Fair Value     Carrying
amount
    Fair Value  

Assets

           

Cash and cash equivalents

   Fair Value    580,978     580,978      1,478,558      1,478,558   

Short-term investments

   Fair Value    135,672     135,672     561,867      561,867   

Accounts receivable

   Amortized Cost    1,959,083      1,959,083      2,210,090      2,210,090   

Derivative financial instruments

   Fair Value    29,179      29,179      29,179      29,179   

Liabilities

           

Trade accounts payable

   Amortized Cost    1,333,291      1,333,291      1,889,543      1,889,543   

Loans and financing

           

Loans and financing

   Amortized Cost    3,965,920      3,990,937      3,571,999      3,597,016   

Debentures

   Amortized Cost    1,091,906      1,058,712      1,091,906      1,058,712   

Derivative Financial Instruments

   Fair Value    222,073      222,073      222,073      222,073   

Tax Refinancing Program

   Amortized Cost    4,381      4,381      5,147      5,147   

Dividends and interest on capital

   Amortized Cost    403,364      403,364      424,022      424,022   

Permits and concessions payable

   Amortized Cost    65,578      65,578      783,659      783,659   

Shareholders’ equity

           

Treasury shares

   Amortized Cost    (152,129   (183,477   (152,129   (183,477

In the evaluation carried out for the purpose of adjustment of assets and liabilities to current value through the amortized cost method, the applicability of such method was not verified, with highlight on the following reasons:

 

   

Accounts receivable: very short maturity of invoices.

 

   

Trade accounts payable: short maturity for the liquidation of all obligations.

 

Page 66


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

   

Loans and financing: all transactions are monetarily adjusted through contract indexes.

 

   

Permits and concessions payable: all obligations resulting from acquisitions of permits are monetarily adjusted through contract indexes.

(b) Foreign exchange risk

The Company has loans and financings denominated in foreign currency. The risk associated with these liabilities is related to the possibility of fluctuations in exchange rates that could increase their balances. Loans subject to such risk represent approximately 11.9% (2008 – 16.7%) of the total loans and financing liabilities, disregarding the operations of foreign exchange hedging contracts. In order to minimize this type of risk, the Company has been entering into foreign exchange hedging contracts with financial institutions. Of the debt portion in foreign currency and the basket of Currencies of BNDES, 39.4% (2008 – 60.5%) is covered by hedging operations of the types exchange swap and foreign currency denominated cash investments. Positive or negative effects on hedging transactions, under exchange swap modality, are recorded in the income statement as earnings or losses, according to the situation of each contract.

The amounts of the derivatives are summarized as follows:

 

    

COMPANY AND CONSOLIDATED

 
                           Fair value  
    

Index

  

Maturity

   Notional amount     Amount (payable)/receivable  
           2009     2008     2009     2008  

“Swap” Contracts

              

Asset position

              

Foreign currency - Yen (i)

   VC + 1.9%    Mar/2010 to Mar/2011    165,342      280,703      122,845      277,774   

Liability position

              

Interest rate - Interbank Certificate of Deposit (CDI) (i)

  

93.2% to

97.0% CDI

   Mar/2010 to Mar/2011    (165,342   (280,703   (321,124   (499,428

Net Value

             (198,280   (221,654

Option Contracts

              

Holder Position - Purchase

              

Foreign Currency - Dollar

      Feb/2009      USD
80,000
  
  
    29,179   

Entering Position - Sale

              

Foreign Currency - Dollar

      Feb/2009      USD
(64,000)
  
  
    (419

 

(i) Yen for CDI swap (plain vanilla)

In 2004, the Company entered into foreign exchange swap transactions (plain vanilla) in order to hedge cash flows related to its yen-denominated liabilities with final maturity in March 2011. Under these contracts, the Company has an asset position in yens, plus fixed interest rate, and a liability position tied to a percentage of a one-day interest rate (CDI), thus hedging against the foreign exchange fluctuation risk of the yen against the Brazilian real, which in effect represented a swap of

 

Page 67


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

yen cost of 1.9% per year with an average weighted rate of 95.9% at balance sheet date. Such contracts were entered into with the following prime financial institutions: Citibank N.A. – Brazilian branch, Citibank DTVM S.A., Banco Citibank S.A., Banco JP Morgan S.A. and Banco Santander Brasil S.A. These transactions were duly recorded at the Clearinghouse for the Custody and Financial Settlement of Securities (CETIP S.A.) and there is no required guarantee margin on these contracts.

Considering that the flows of asset position of swap contracts shall be offset by liability flows of the Yen-denominated debt, the Company considers that the risk of being liability in one day interest rate (CDI) is the raise of the CDI.

Exchange Risk Sensitivity Analysis

At the end of the fiscal year, the management estimate Real devaluation scenarios face to other currencies based in Dollar (short PTAX) of quarter termination. For the probable scenario, the same dollar exchange rate of the fiscal year closure was utilized. Probable rate was, so, devaluated in 25% and 50%, being a parameter to possible and remote scenarios, respectively.

 

Exchange rates scenarios

 

Description

   Rate    Devaluation  

Probable scenario

     

Dollar

   1.7412    0

Yen

   0.018832    0

Currency Basket

   0.033995    0

Possible scenario

     

Dollar

   2.1765    25

Yen

   0.02354    25

Currency Basket

   0.042494    25

Remote scenario

     

Dollar

   2.6118    50

Yen

   0.028248    50

Currency Basket

   0.050993    50

As of December 31, 2009, management estimated a future outflow for the payment of interest and principal of its debts pegged to foreign exchange rates based on interest rates prevailing at balance sheet date and the foreign exchange rates above, also assuming that all interest and principal payments would be made on scheduled maturity dates. The impact of hypothetical devaluation of the Brazilian real in relation to other currencies can be measured by the difference in the future flows in the possible and remote scenarios compared to the probable scenario, where there is no estimate of devaluation. Such sensitivity analysis considers payment outflows in future dates. Thus, the sum of the amounts for each scenario is not equivalent to the fair amount, or even to the present value of the liabilities.

 

Page 68


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

COMPANY  

Transaction

  

Individual risk

   Future payment outflows by period  
      Up to 1 year     1 to 3 years     3 to 5 years    Total  

Probable scenario

         

Dollar debts

   Dollar increase    43,988      77,085      404,506    525,579   

Yen debts

   Yen increase    83,824      41,131         124,955   

Derivatives (net position – yen)

   Yen decrease    (83,143   (40,977      (124,120

Currency basket debts

   Currency basket increase    30,578      9,575         40,153   
                          

Total pegged to exchange rates

      75,247      86,814      404,506    566,567   
                          

Possible scenario

         

Dollar debts

   Dollar increase    54,985      96,356      505,633    656,974   

Yen debts

   Yen increase    104,780      51,414         156,194   

Derivatives (net position – yen)

   Yen decrease    (103,929   (51,221      (155,150

Currency basket debts

   Currency basket increase    38,223      11,969         50,192   
                          

Total pegged to exchange rates

      94,059      108,518      505,633    708,210   
                          

Remote scenario

         

Dollar debts

   Dollar increase    65,982      115,628      606,759    788,369   

Yen debts

   Yen increase    125,736      61,697         187,433   

Derivatives (net position – yen)

   Yen decrease    (124,715   (61,466      (186,181

Currency basket debts

   Currency basket increase    45,867      14,363         60,230   
                          

Total pegged to exchange rates

   112,870      130,222      606,759    849,851   
                          

Impacts

         

Possible scenario – probable scenario

   18,812      21,704      101,127    141,643   

Dollar

   10,997      19,271      101,127    131,395   

Yen

   170      39         209   

Mix

   7,645      2,394         10,039   

Remote Scenario – Probable Scenario

   37,623      43,408      202,253    283,284   

Dollar

   21,994      38,543      202,253    262,790   

Yen

   340      77         417   

Mix

   15,289      4,788         20,077   

There are no flows in periods above five years.

 

Page 69


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

CONSOLIDATED  

Transaction

  

Individual risk

   Future payment outflows by period  
      Up to 1 year     1 to 3 years     3 to 5 years    Total  

Probable scenario

         

Dollar debts

   Dollar increase    43,988      77,085      404,506    525,579   

Cash in dollar (*)

   Dollar decrease    (87,151        (87,151

Yen debts

   Yen increase    83,824      41,131         124,955   

Derivatives (net position – yen)

   Yen decrease    (83,143   (40,977      (124,120

Currency basket debts

   Currency basket increase    30,578      9,575         40,153   

Total pegged to exchange rates

      (11,904   86,814      404,506    479,416   

Possible scenario

         

Dollar debts

   Dollar increase    54,985      96,356      505,632    656,974   

Cash in dollar (*)

   Dollar decrease    (108,939        (108,939

Yen debts

   Yen increase    104,779      51,414         156,193   

Derivatives (net position – yen)

   Yen decrease    (103,928   (51,221      (155,150

Currency basket debts

   Currency basket increase    38,222      11,968         50,190   

Total pegged to exchange rates

      (14,881   108,517      505,632    599,268   

Remote scenario

         

Dollar debts

   Dollar increase    65,982      115,628      606,759    788,369   

Cash in dollar (*)

   Dollar decrease    (130,726        (130,726

Yen debts

   Yen increase    125,735      61,697         187,432   

Derivatives (net position – yen)

   Yen decrease    (124,714   (61,466      (186,180

Currency basket debts

   Currency basket increase    45,867      14,362         60,229   

Total pegged to exchange rates

   (17,856   130,221      606,759    719,124   

Impacts

         

Possible scenario – probable scenario

   (2,977   21,704      101,126    119,853   

Dollar

   (10,791   19,271      101,126    109,606   

Yen

   170      39         209   

Currency basket

   7,644      2,394         10,038   

Remote Scenario – Probable Scenario

   (5,952   43,407      202,253    239,708   

Dollar

   (21,581   38,543      202,253    219,215   

Yen

   340      77         417   

Currency basket

   15,289      4,787         20,076   

 

(*) Cash in Dollar for hedge

 

Page 70


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

The fair value of instruments subject to foreign exchange risk would be impacted as follows in the estimated scenarios:

COMPANY

Impact on Fair Value of Liability Transactions

 

Transaction

  

Risk

   Balance at 12/31/09  

Probable scenario

     

Dollar debts

   Dollar increase    371,475   

Yen debts

   Yen increase    122,709   

Derivatives (net position - yen)

   Yen decrease    (122,845

Currency basket debts

   Currency basket increase    37,689   

Total pegged to exchange rates

      409,028   

Possible scenario

     

Dollar debts

   Dollar increase    464,344   

Yen debts

   Yen increase    153,386   

Derivatives (net position - yen)

   Yen decrease    (153,556

Currency basket debts

   Currency basket increase    47,111   

Total pegged to exchange rates

      511,285   

Remote scenario

     

Dollar debts

   Dollar increase    557,213   

Yen debts

   Yen increase    184,064   

Derivatives (net position - yen)

   Yen decrease    (184,268

Currency basket debts

   Currency basket increase    56,534   

Total pegged to exchange rates

      613,543   

Impacts

     

Possible scenario - probable scenario

      102,257   

Dollar

      92,869   

Yen

      (34

Currency basket

      9,422   

Remote Scenario – Probable Scenario

      204,515   

Dollar

      185,738   

Yen

      (68

Currency basket

      18,845   

 

Page 71


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

CONSOLIDATED

Impacts on Fair Value of Liability Instruments

 

Transaction

  

Risk

   Balance at 12/31/09  

Probable scenario

     

Dollar debts

   Dollar increase    371,475   

Cash in dollar (*)

   Dollar decrease    (87,151

Yen debts

   Yen increase    122,709   

Derivatives (net position - yen)

   Yen decrease    (122,845

Currency basket debts

   Currency basket increase    37,689   

Total pegged to exchange rates

      321,877   

Possible scenario

     

Dollar debts

   Dollar increase    464,344   

Cash in dollar (*)

   Dollar decrease    (108,939

Yen debts

   Yen increase    153,386   

Derivatives (net position - yen)

   Yen decrease    (153,556

Currency basket debts

   Currency basket increase    47,111   

Total pegged to exchange rates

      402,346   

Remote scenario

     

Dollar debts

   Dollar increase    557,212   

Cash in dollar (*)

   Dollar decrease    (130,726

Yen debts

   Yen increase    184,064   

Derivatives (net position - yen)

   Yen decrease    (184,267

Currency basket debts

   Currency basket increase    56,534   

Total pegged to exchange rates

      482,817   

Impacts

     

Possible scenario - probable scenario

      80,469   

Dollar

      71,081   

Yen

      (34

Currency basket

      9,422   

Remote Scenario – Probable Scenario

      160,939   

Dollar

      142,162   

Yen

      (68

Currency basket

      18,845   

 

(*) Cash in Dollar for hedge.

c. Interest Rate Risk

Assets

Cash equivalents and short-term investments in local currency are kept in financial investment funds (FIFs) exclusively managed for the Company and investments in its own portfolio of private securities (floating rate bank certificates of deposit - CDBs) issued by prime financial institutions.

The Company has also granted a loan to the company that manufactures telephone directories, which earns interest based on the IGP-DI (General Price Index - Domestic Supply). Fixed income bonds (CDBs) shall be kept in applications at the Banco de Brasília S.A., related to the guarantee to the credit incentive granted by the Federal District Government, which program is called PRO-DF - Program of Economic and Sustainable Development Promotion of the Federal District, with such bonds remuneration being 94% to 97% of the SELIC rate.

 

Page 72


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

The interest rate risk linked to such assets arises from the possibility of fluctuations in these rates and consequent decrease in return on these assets.

These assets are presented in the balance sheet as follows:

 

     COMPANY
     2009    2008
     Carrying
amount
   Market
value
   Carrying
amount
   Market
value

Assets

           

Cash Equivalents

   599,719    599,719    430,818    430,818

Short-term investments

   118,476    118,476    135,672    135,672

Loans and financing – Private Debenture

   1,371,321    1,523,456      

Other Assets

   39,254    39,254    6,868    6,868

Total

   2,099,762    2,251,897    573,358    573,358

Current

   749,182    749,182    568,248    568,248

Noncurrent

   1,350,580    1,502,715    5,110    5,110

 

     CONSOLIDATED
     2009    2008
     Carrying
amount
   Fair value    Carrying
amount
   Fair value

Assets

           

Cash equivalents

   1,542,545    1,542,545    1,310,720    1,310,720

Short-term investments

   381,951    381,951    561,867    561,867

Loans and financing – Private Debenture

   1,674,750    1,864,563      

Other Assets

   16,692    16,692    6,868    6,868

Total

   3,615,938    3,805,751    1,879,455    1,879,455

Current

   1,926,476    2,027,603    1,874,345    1,874,345

Noncurrent

   1,689,462    1,778,148    5,110    5,110

Liabilities

The Company has loans and financing in local currency subject to the following indexes: Long-term Interest Rate (TJLP), Monetary Unit of the National Bank for Economic and Social Development (UMBNDES), Interbank Certificate of Deposit (CDI) and General Price Index – Domestic Supply (IGP-DI), as well as financing in foreign currency subject to the YEN LIBOR and LIBOR indexes. The Company also has exposure to CDI rate resulting from swap operations contracted with the aim of protecting its Yen-related liability, as mentioned in Note 23 (b). There are no other derivative transactions to hedge the liabilities against the interest rate risk.

Furthermore, the Company issued public debentures, non-convertible into or exchangeable for shares. Such liability was contracted at interest rate connected to CDI rate, capitalized from a “spread” of 3.5% p.a. The risk inherent to such liabilities appears due to the possibility of possible raises of such rates. However, the Company continuously monitors the market rates to evaluate the possibility of entering into derivative contracts to hedge against the risk of fluctuations in these rates.

 

Page 73


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

Interest rates sensitivity analysis

The Company understands that the most significant risk related to interest rate changes arises from its liabilities subject to the LIBOR (US$ and PPY), CDI and TJLP rate. The risk is associated to an increase in those rates.

At balance sheet date, management estimated a probable scenario of changes in CDI, LIBOR (US$) and TJLP rates. The rates prevailing at balance sheet date were used in the probable scenario. These rates have been stressed by 25% and 50%, and used as benchmark for the possible and remote scenarios.

 

Interest exchange rate scenario

Probable scenario

  

Possible scenario

  

Remote scenario

CDI

   TJLP    CDI    TJLP    CDI    TJLP

8.55% p.a.

   6.00% p.a.    10.68% p.a.    7.50% p.a.    12.83% p.a.    9.00% p.a.

As of December 31, 2009, management estimated a future outflow for the payment of interest and principal of its debts pegged to CDI, TJLP and LIBOR (US$) based on the interest rates above, also assuming that all interest and principal payments would be made on scheduled maturity dates. Flows of debts contracted among companies of the Oi Group were not considered.

The impact of hypothetical increase of interest rates can be measured by the difference in the future flows in the possible and remote scenarios compared to the probable scenario, where there is no estimate of increase.

Such sensitivity analysis considers payment outflows in future dates. Thus, the aggregate of the amounts for each scenario is not equivalent to the fair value, or even the present value of these liabilities. The fair value of these liabilities, should the Company’s credit risk remain unchanged, would not be impacted in the event of fluctuations in interest rates, as the interest rates used to estimate future cash outflows would be the same which adjust such flows to present value.

In addition, cash equivalents and short-term investments are been held in post-fixed bonds that could have an remuneration increasing in possible and remote scenarios, neutralizing part of interest rates increasing impact on debts payment flow. Although, due there is not possible to have a foresee ability of obligations equivalent to financial liabilities, scenarios impact on these assets has not been considered. Cash equivalents and short-term investments balances are presented in Note 9.

 

Page 74


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

COMPANY

 

Future interest payment outflows by period

Transaction

  

Individual risk

   Up to 1 year    1 to 3 years    3 to 5 years    Larger than
5 years
   Total

Probable scenario

                 

CDI debts

   CDI increase    128,491    173,093    21,095       322,679

Derivatives (net position – CDI)

   CDI increase    113,631    61,888          175,519

TJLP debts

   TJLP increase    188,906    217,687    51,902    5,783    464,278
                           

Total pegged to interest rates

      431,028    452,668    72,997    5,783    962,476
                           

Possible scenario

              

CDI debts

   CDI increase    148,859    203,080    24,747       376,686

Derivatives (net position – CDI)

   CDI increase    115,641    64,561          180,202

TJLP debts

   TJLP increase    194,756    248,951    88,095    9,411    541,213
                           

Total pegged to interest rates

      459,256    516,592    112,842    9,411    1,098,101
                           

Remote scenario

              

CDI debts

   CDI increase    169,015    232,780    28,362       430,157

Derivatives (net position – CDI)

   CDI increase    117,635    67,243          184,878

TJLP debts

   TJLP increase    200,579    280,725    125,732    13,366    620,402
                           

Total pegged to interest rates

   487,229    580,748    154,094    13,366    1,235,437
                           

Impacts

              

Possible scenario – probable scenario

   28,228    63,924    39,845    3,628    135,625

CDI

   23,378    32,660    3,651       58,690

TJLP

   5,850    31,265    36,193    3,628    76,935

Remote Scenario – Probable Scenario

   56,201    128,080    81,097    7,583    272,961

CDI

   44,529    65,042    7,267       116,837

TJLP

   11,673    63,039    73,830    7,583    156,124

 

Page 75


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

CONSOLIDATED

Future interest payment outflows by period

Transaction

  

Individual risk

   Up to 1 year    1 to 3 years    3 to 5 years    Larger than
5 years
   Total

Probable scenario

                 

CDI debts

   CDI increase    128,491    173,093    21,095       322,679

Derivatives (net position – CDI)

   CDI increase    113,631    61,888          175,519

TJLP debts

   TJLP increase    234,289    299,492    109,019    44,356    687,156
                           

Total pegged to interest rates

      476,411    534,473    130,114    44,356    1,185,354
                           

Possible scenario

              

CDI debts

   CDI increase    148,859    203,080    24,747       376,686

Derivatives (net position – CDI)

   CDI increase    115,641    64,561          180,202

TJLP debts

   TJLP increase    240,628    336,405    156,601    74,675    808,309
                           

Total pegged to interest rates

      505,128    604,046    181,348    74,675    1,365,197
                           

Remote scenario

              

CDI debts

   CDI increase    169,015    232,780    28,362       430,157

Derivatives (net position – CDI)

   CDI increase    117,635    67,243          184,878

TJLP debts

   TJLP increase    246,938    373,928    206,134    107,624    934,624
                           

Total pegged to interest rates

   533,588    673,951    234,496    107,624    1,549,659
                           

Impacts

              

Possible scenario – probable scenario

   28,717    69,573    51,234    30,319    179,843

CDI

   22,378    32,660    3,652       58,690

TJLP

   6,339    36,913    47,582    30,319    121,153

Remote Scenario – Probable Scenario

   57,177    139,478    104,382    63,268    364,305

CDI

   44,528    65,042    7,267       116,837

TJLP

   12,649    74,436    97,115    63,268    247,468

d. Credit risk

Concentration of credit risk associated with accounts receivable from customers is not material, due to the Company´s highly diversified customer portfolio and the monitoring controls applied. The doubtful debts are properly covered by a provision for potential losses in this respect.

Transactions with financial institutions (short-term investments, loans and financing) are distributed among first class institutions, thereby minimizing the risk of concentration.

e. Liquidity risk

The cash flows from operating and third-party financing are used to defray capital expenses on the expansion and modernization of the network, payment of dividends, prepayment of debts and investments in new businesses.

f. Risk of Early Maturity of Loans and financing

The nonperformance of debts in some consolidated debt instruments of the Company and its subsidiaries can typify the accelerated maturity of other debt instruments. The impossibility to incur in new debts might prevent such companies from investing in their business and incur in required or advisable capital expenditures, which would reduce future sales and adversely impact their profitability. Additionally, the funds necessary to meet the payment commitments of the loans taken can reduce the amount of funds available for capital expenditures.

 

Page 76


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

If the covenants defined in the contracts between the Company and the JBIC are not accomplished in the period finished on March 31, 2010, and if JBIC not waive this right, these companies might be required to settle the debt. Beyond this, other agreements and financial instruments engaged by the Company and its subsidiaries are subject to cross acceleration maturity, which gives to related creditors the right to declare also the accelerated maturity of these contracts and financial instruments, if occurs the acceleration of the financings maturities, conceded by contracts executed with JBIC by the Company.

g. Contingent Risks

Contingencies are assessed according to probable, possible or remote loss risk. The contingencies for which an unfavorable outcome is regarded as probable are recorded in liabilities. Details on these risks are presented in note 21.

h. Regulatory risk

Regulatory risks are related to the STFC activity, which is the most expressive segment in which the Company operates.

Concession Agreements

The Company has entered into local and domestic long distance concession agreements with ANATEL, effective from January 1, 2006 to December 31, 2025. These concession agreements, which provide for revisions on a five–year basis, generally have a higher degree of intervention on management and several provisions defending the consumer’s interests, as analyzed by regulation agency. The main highlights are:

(i) The public concession fee is defined as 2% of company´s net revenue, calculated every two years, starting 2006, and the first payment was made on April 30, 2007. This will occur successively until end of the concession period. This calculation method, as regards its accrual, corresponds to 1% for each fiscal year;

(ii) The definition of new universal service goals, especially the installation of network infrastructure for connection to high-capacity access networks;

(iii) The Regulation Agency can impose alternative mandatory offer plans;

(iv) Introduction of the Regulatory Agency’s right to intervene in and change the concessionaire’s agreements with third parties;

(v) Classification of the parent company’s, subsidiary’s, associate’s and third-parties’ assets, indispensable for the concession, as returnable assets; and

 

Page 77


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

(vi) Establishment of a users’ council in each concession.

Interconnection tariffs are defined as a percentage of the public local and domestic long distance tariff until the effective implementation of a cost model by service/modality, which is scheduled for 2010, pursuant to the models defined by the Separation and Accounting Allocation Regulations (Resolution 396/2005).

24. EMPLOYEE BENEFITS

(a) Private Pension Plans

The Company and its subsidiaries sponsor retirement plans to the benefit of those employees who opt for them and to their dependents. The following table shows a list of all benefit plans available as of December 31, 2009.

 

Benefit plan

  

Sponsoring companies

  

Manager

PBS-A

   BrT    Sistel

PAMA

   BrT    Sistel

TCSPREV

   BrT, BrT Celular, VANT, BrT Multimídia, BrT CS, iG and BrTI    Fundação 14

BrTPREV

   BrT, BrT Celular, BrT Multimídia, BrT CS, iG and BrTI    FBrTPREV

Fundador / Alternativo

   BrT, BrT Celular, BrT Multimídia, BrT CS, iG and BrTI    FBrTPREV

PAMEC

   BrT    BrT

Sistel – Fundação Sistel de Seguridade Social (Social Security Foundation)

Fundação 14 – Fundação 14 de Previdência Privada (Social Security Foundation)

FBRTPREV – Fundação BrTPREV (Social Security Foundation)

For the effects of the aforementioned pension plans, the Company can also be denominated as the “Sponsor”.

On January 1, 2010, the supplementary social security plans under the management of Fundação 14 and FbrTRPREV above described, were transferred to FASS management.

The sponsored plans are appraised by independent actuaries at balance sheet date. For fiscal years 2009 and 2008, the actuarial valuations were performed by Mercer Human Resource Consulting Ltda. The Bylaws provide for approval of the supplementary pension plan policy, and the joint liability attributed to the defined benefit plans is ruled by the agreements entered into with the foundations, with the agreement of the SPC (Secretariat for Pension Plans), as regards specific plans.

For the pension funds identified in this explanatory note, until the closure of the year of 2008, the immediate acknowledgement of actuarial gains and losses was adopted, constituting the entire liability for the plans that are in deficit situation. On December 31, 2009, aiming at adjusting the concept of actuarial gains and losses acknowledgment to that adopted by the current parent company, the Company started to use, prospectively, the "corridor approach" criterion, according to the rules of CVM Deliberation 371/2000.

 

Page 78


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

For the sponsored defined benefit plans, no new entrants are allowed because these plans are closed. The contributions of participants and of the sponsor are defined in the Maintenance Cost Plan. The SPC is the official organ which approves and controls the plans as referred to.

For those plans in a positive actuarial situation, assets are recorded in cases of explicit permit for offsetting them against future employer contributions.

Accruals for pension funds

Refer to the recognition of the actuarial deficit of the defined benefit plans, as demonstrated below:

 

     COMPANY AND
CONSOLIDATED
     2009    2008

BrTPREV and Fundador/Alternativo Plans

   677,006    753,287

PAMEC plan

   2,707    2,504

Total

   679,713    755,791

Current

   104,533    148,391

Noncurrent

   575,180    607,400

Assets Recognized to be Offset Against Future Employer Contributions

The Company recognized assets from the TCSPREV Plan, managed by Fundação 14, related to: (i) contributions from the sponsor which participants that left the Plan are not entitled to redeem; and (ii) part of the Plan’s surplus attributed to the sponsor.

The recognized asset composes the item of other assets and will be used to offset future employer contributions. Its composition is following presented:

 

     COMPANY AND
CONSOLIDATED
     2009    2008

TCSPREV

   136,277    123,938

Total

   136,277    123,938

Current

      15,874

Noncurrent

   136,277    108,064

Characteristics of the supplementary pension plans sponsored:

FUNDAÇÃO 14

Fundação 14 de Previdência Privada was created in 2004 to manage and operate the TCSPREV pension plan.

 

Page 79


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

Plan

TCSPREV

This defined contribution and settled benefit plan was introduced on February 28, 2000. On December 31, 2001, all pension plans sponsored by the Company at the time were merged into SISTEL, and the SPC exceptionally and provisionally approved the document submitted to that Agency, in view of the need for adjustments to the regulations. Thus, TCSPREV consists of defined contribution groups with settled and defined benefits. The plans added to the TCSPREV were PBS-TCS, PBT-BrT, BrT Management Agreement, and the Unusual Contractual Relationship Document, and the terms and conditions set forth in the original plans were maintained.

On September, 18, 2008, SPC/MPS Ordinance 2521/2008, which approved the new plan regulation, was published in the Federal Official Gazette (D.O.U.), fully recognizing what had been exceptionally and provisionally approved on December 31, 2001. The new regulation also includes the adjustments necessary to meet the current requirements of supplementary pension plan legislation.

In March 2003, the TCSPREV Plan was no longer offered to the sponsors’ new hires. However, this plan started to be offered again in March 2005 to the defined contribution group. TCSPREV currently serves nearly 60.92% of the staff.

Contributions to this plan, by group of participants, are established based on actuarial studies prepared by independent actuaries according to the regulations in force in Brazil, using the capitalization system to determine the costs. Currently, contributions are made by the participants and the sponsor only for the internal groups PBS-TCS (defined benefit) and TCSPREV (defined contribution). In the TCSPREV group, the contributions are credited to individual accounts of each participant, equally by employee and sponsor, and the basic contribution percentages range from 3% to 8% of the participant’s salary, according to participant’s age. Participants have the option to make additional contributions to the plan but without parity of the sponsor. In the PBS-TCS group, the sponsor’s contribution corresponds to 12% of the participants’ payroll, whereas the employee’s contribution varies according to his/her age, time of service and salary, and an entry fee may also be paid depending on the age at which he/she joins the plan. The sponsors are responsible for defraying all the administrative costs and risk benefits, except for self-sponsored participants and the deferral of benefits.

The SPC authorized, through Administrative Rule 2792/2009, the transfer of TCSPREV plan´s management to Fundação Atlântico de Seguridade Social, an entity sponsored by the Oi Group, new controlling shareholder of the Company.

ASSISTENCIAL PLAN MANAGED BY THE COMPANY

PAMEC-BrT – Health Care Plan for Supplementary Pension Beneficiaries (Defined Benefit).

The defined benefit plan, intended to provide health care for retirees and pensioners bounded to PBTBrT Group, a pension plan managed by Fundação 14.

 

Page 80


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

The contributions to PAMEC-BrT were fully paid in July 1998, through a single payment. However, as this plan is now managed by the Company, after the transfer of management by Fundação 14 in November 2007, there are no assets recognized to cover current expenses, and the actuarial liability is fully recognized in the Company’s liabilities.

SISTEL

Sistel is a not-for-profit private welfare business entity, set up in November 1977 with the corporate purpose of establishing private plans to provide savings, income, supplementary benefits or the like, to supplement the government pension, for the employees and their family members who are linked to the sponsors of SISTEL.

Plans

PBS-A

The defined benefits plan, jointly kept with other sponsors related to the provision of telecommunication services, intended for participants that were in the condition of assisted on January 31, 2000.

Contributions to the PBS-A are contingent on the determination of an accumulated deficit. As of December 31, 2009, date of the last actuarial valuation, the plan presented a surplus.

PAMA

The health care plan to the retired employees and the PCE – Special Coverage Plan, both with defined contribution, jointly kept with other sponsors related to the provision of telecommunication services, intended for participants that were in the condition of assisted on January 31, 2000, to the assisted of PBS-TCS Groups, incorporated on December 31, 2001 to the TCSPREV (plan currently managed by Fundação 14) and to the assisted of defined benefit plans, PBSs, sponsored by other companies, before SISTEL and other foundations. According to a legal and actuarial evaluation, the Sponsor’s responsibility is only limited to future contributions. From March to July 2004, December 2005 to April 2006 and June to November 2008, an incentive optional migration of PAMA retirees and pensioners to new coverage conditions (PCE) was carried out. The option of participants to migrate results in contribution to PAMA/PCE.

The contributions to this plan correspond to 1.5% of the payroll of active participants subject to PBS plans, segregated and sponsored by the several sponsoring companies. In the case of BrT, PBS-TCS was merged into the PCSPREV plan on December 31, 2001, becoming an internal group of this plan. To be able to use to PAMA’s resources, the participants share a portion of this plan’s individual costs. Contributions are also made by the retirees and pensioners who migrated to PAMA/PCE. For sponsors, the option of participants to migrate to PAMA/PCE does not change the aforementioned employer contribution of 1.5%.

 

Page 81


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

FUNDAÇÃO BrTPREV

Manager originated from the plans sponsored by former CRT, a company which was merged into the Company at the end of 2000. By sponsoring FBrTPREV, the Company’s main purpose is to maintain plans that supplement the pension plans and other benefits offered to participants by the official social security system.

Plans

BrTPREV

Defined contribution and settled benefit plan, launched in October 2002, intended to grant pension plan benefits supplementary to those provided by the official social security system and which initially served only employees of the Rio Grande do Sul Branch. This pension plan was offered to new employees of the Company and its subsidiaries from March 2003 to February 2005, when its offering was suspended. This plan cannot be joined by new participants. BrTPREV currently serves nearly 19.34% of the staff.

The contributions for this plan are established based on actuarial studies prepared by independent actuaries according to the regulations in force in Brazil, using the capitalization system to determine the costs. The contributions are credited to individual accounts of each participant, equally by employee and sponsor, and the basic contribution percentages vary from 3% to 8% of the participant’s salary, according to the participant’s age. Participants have the option to make additional contributions to the plan but without parity of the sponsor. The sponsors are responsible for defraying all the administrative costs and risk benefits, except for self-sponsored participants and the deferral of benefits.

Fundador / Alternativo

Defined benefit plans intended to provide pension benefits supplementary to the benefits of the official social security system, which cannot be joined by new participants, originated from the merger of the Fundador-BrT plan by the Alternativo-BrT plan, pursuant to SPC Administrative Rule 2,627/2008, thus forming a single plan, without changing the rules for the participants and beneficiaries, and which was renamed to Fundador/Alternativo plan. These plans currently serve nearly 0.15% of the staff.

The regular contribution made by the sponsor is equal to the regular contribution made by the participant, the rates of which vary according to his/her age, time of service and salary. Under the Alternativo Plan – Brasil Telecom, the contributions are limited to three times the ceiling benefit of the National Social Security Institute (INSS) and the participant also pays an entry fee depending on the age at which he/she joins the plan.

Actuarial Deficit of the Plans

The unamortized mathematical reserve, referring to the current value of BrT’s supplementary contribution, in view of the actuarial deficit of the plans managed by FBrTPREV, has a maximum settlement term of 20 years, starting January, 2002, according to Circular 66/SPC/GAB/COA, dated January 25, 2002, from SPC. Of this maximum determined term, there remains 12 years for full payment.

 

Page 82


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

Through Administrative Rule 2792/2009, SPC authorized the transference of Fundação BrTPREV benefits plan management to Fundação Atlântico de Seguridade Social, an entity sponsored by Oi Group, new controlling shareholder of the Company.

Situation of Sponsored Plans, Reviewed at the Date of Year Terminations (FBrTPREV and Fundação 14))

The information of sponsored pension funds that have defined benefit obligations are presented as follows:

 

     BrTPREV and Fundador/
Alternativo
    TCSPREV  
     2009     2008     2009     2008  

RECONCILIATION OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES

  

     

Actuarial Liabilities with Granted Benefits

   1,520,800      1,529,300      313,600      271,700   

Actuarial Liabilities with Payable Benefits

   74,332      79,779      80,773      140,493   

(=) Total of Actuarial Liabilities Current Amount

   1,595,132      1,609,079      394,373      412,193   

Fair Value of the Plan’s Assets

   (937,590   (855,792   (1,112,181   (822,778
                        

(=) Net Actuarial Liability/(Asset)

   657,542      753,287      (717,808   (410,585
                        

Non-recognized Actuarial Gains

   19,464        247,967     
                        

Unrecorded amount Due to the Limit on the Defined Benefit

       333,564      286,647   
                        

(=) Net Recognized Actuarial Liability/(Asset)(1)

   677,006      753,287      (136,277   (123,938
                        

 

(1)

The Company determines the amount available for the discount of future contributions according to the applicable legal provisions and the rules of the benefits plan. The amount of the asset related to the TCSPREV Plan recognized in the accounting statements of the Corporation, totaling R$136,277 (2008 - R$123,938), does not surpass the current amount of future contributions.

 

     BrTPREV and
Fundador/Alternativo
    TCSPREV  
     2009     2008     2009     2008  

MOVING OF THE NET ACTUARIAL LIABILITY/(ASSET)

  

   

Current amount of actuarial liability at the beginning of the year

   1,609,079      1,499,042      412,193      464,439   

Interests cost

   166,307      154,905      43,024      48,577   

Current service cost

   4,020      6,110      2,428      3,894   

Net Paid Benefits

   (127,551   (119,343   (26,039   (22,787

Actuarial (Gain) or Loss on the Actuarial Liability

   (56,723   68,365      (37,233   (81,930
                        

Current amount of actuarial liability at the beginning of the year

   1,595,132      1,609,079      394,373      412,193   
                        

Assets fair value of the plan at the beginning of the year

   855,792      813,374      822,778      791,362   

Plan’s assets revenues

   68,428      61,415      314,759      53,716   

Usual contributions received by plan

   1,149      2,838      1,066      487   

Sponsor

   1,063      2,655      683      16   

Participants

   86      183      383      471   

Amortization contributions received from sponsorship

   139,858      97,508       

Benefits Payment

   (127,637   (119,343   (26,422   (22,787

Assets fair value of the plan at the end of the year

   937,590      855,792      1,112,181      822,778   

(=) Amount of the Net Actuarial Liability/(Asset)

   657,542      753,287      (717,808   (410,585

Unrecognized Actuarial Gains

   19,464        247,967     

Unrecorded amount Due to the Limit on the Defined Benefit

       333,564      286,647   
                        

(=) Net Recognized Actuarial Liability/(Asset)

   677,006      753,287      (136,277   (123,938
                        

 

Page 83


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

     BrTPREV and
Fundador/Alternativo
    TCSPREV  
     

2009

    2008     2009     2008  

RECOGNIZED EXPENSES IN STATEMENTS OF OPERATION OF BrT(1)

  

Current service cost

   4,020      6,110      2,428      3,894   

Participant's contributions

   (86   (183   (383   (471

Interests cost

   166,307      154,905       

Plan’s assets revenues

   (68,428   (61,415    

Recognized Actuarial Losses (Gains)

   (56,723   68,365       
                        

Total of the Recognized Expense

   45,090      167,782      2,045      3,423   
                        

 

(1)

With reference to the TCSPREV Plan Surplus, recorded in the asset, the Company recognized incomes totaling R$55,024, with R$40,479 recorded in other operational incomes and R$14,545, recorded in financial incomes. In 2008, the recognized income was R$67,096, with R$61,104 accounted for in other operational incomes, and R$5,992, in financial incomes.

 

     BrTPREV and
Fundador/Alternativo
  TCSPREV
     2009   2008   2009   2008

MAIN ACTUARIAL PREMISES

Actuarial liability discount rate(6% + Inflation)

   11.40%   10.77%   11.40%   10.77%

Estimated inflation rate

   4.50%   4.50%   4.50%   4.50%

Estimated pay increase

   7.63%   6.59%   7.63%   6.59%

Estimated benefits increase

   4.50%   4.50%   4.50%   4.50%

Expected earnings rate on the assets of the plans

   11.61%

(Fundador and
Alterantivo) and

11.68%

(BrTPREV)

  12.58%   12.09%   12.83%

General mortality table

   AT2000   AT83   AT2000   AT83

Disability table

   Zimmermann
Nichzugs
  Mercer
Disability
  Zimmermann
Nichzugs
  Mercer
Disability

Disabled mortality table

   Winklevoss   IAPB-57   Winklevoss   IAPB-57

Turnover Rate

   1.5% p.a.; null
from 50 years
old and above
and for Paid
Benefit
  Null   1.5% p.a.;
null from 50
years old and
above and
for Paid
Benefit
  Null

 

Page 84


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION - 2009

 

a) The assets and liabilities of the plans are that started on December 31, 2009.

 

b) Registry data utilized are of September 30, 2009, projected to December 31, 2009.

Situation of Sponsored Plans, Reviewed at the Date of the Year Termination (Sistel and PAMEC)

 

     PBS-A     PAMEC
     2009     2008     2009     2008

RECONCILIATION OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES

        

Actuarial liabilities with granted benefits

   624,068      667,702      3,053      2,504

(=) Total of actuarial liabilities current amount

   624,068      667,702      3,053      2,504

Fair value of the plan’s assets

   (973,464   (1,005,683    
                      

(=) Net actuarial liability/(asset)(1)

   (349,396   (337,981   3,053      2,504
                      

Not-recognized actuarial gains/losses

   (30,174     (347  

Unrecorded amount due to the limit on the defined benefit

   379,570      337,981       
                      

(=) Recognized actuarial liability

       2,706      2,504
                      

 

(1)

In the case of the net actuarial asset of PBS-A Plan, there is no accounting recognition at the Sponsor. Such plan is entirely composed of assisted participants, thus with no future contributions that could be offset with the existing surplus.

 

     PBS-A     PAMEC  
     2009     2008     2009     2008  

CHANGES IN THE NET ACTUARIAL LIABILITY/(ASSET)

  

   

Current amount of actuarial liabilities at the beginning of the year

   667,702      604,572      2,504      2,077   

Interests cost

   68,981      62,400      264      219   

Current service cost

        

Net paid benefits

   (55,596   (57,620   (62   (110

Actuarial (gain) or loss on actuarial liabilities

   (57,019   58,350      347      318   
                        

Current amount of actuarial liability at the beginning of the year

   624,068      667,702      3,053      2,504   
                        

Assets fair value of the plan at the beginning of the year

   1,005,683      1,006,475       

Plan’s assets revenues

   23,377      56,828       

Sponsor’s contributions

       62      110   

Benefits Payment

   (55,596   (57,620   (62   (110
                        

Assets fair value of the plan at yearend

   973,464      1,005,683       
                        

(=) Amount of the Net Actuarial Liability/(Asset)

   (349,396   (337,981   3,053      2,504   
                        

Not recognized actuarial gains/losses

   (30,174     (347  

Unrecorded amount Due to the Limit on the Defined Benefit

   379,570      337,981       
                        

(=) Recognized Actuarial Liability

       2,706      2,504   
                        

 

     PAMEC
     2009    2008

RECOGNIZED EXPENSES IN STATEMENTS OF OPERATION OF BrT

Current service cost

     

Interests cost

   264    219

Plan’s assets revenues (loss)

     

Recognized actuarial losses (gains)

   347    318
         

Total of recognized expense

   611    537
         

 

Page 85


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

      PBS-A     PAMEC  
     

2009

    2008     2009     2008  

MAIN ACTUARIAL PREMISES

  

Actuarial liability discount rate (6% + Inflation)

   11.40   10.77   11.40   10,77

Estimated inflation rate

   4.50   4.50   4.50   4,50

Estimated benefits increase

   4.50   4.50   N/A   

Medical costs increasing rate

   N/A      7.64   7.64

Expected earnings rate on the assets of the plans

   9.76   11.30   N/A   

General mortality table

   AT2000      AT83      AT2000      AT83   

Disability table

   N/A      N/A   

Start age of benefits

   N/A      N/A   

 

N/A = Not Applicable.

 

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION - 2009

 

a) The assets and liabilities of the plans are that started on December 31, 2009.

 

b) Registry data utilized for PBS-A and PAMEC are of September 31, 2009, both projected to December 31, 2009.

The investment strategy of pension plans is described in their investment policy, which is annually approved by the steering committee of the sponsored funds. It defines that the investment decisions must consider: (i) the preservation of the capital; (ii) the diversification of the investments; (iii) the tolerance to risks according to conservative premises; (iv) the expected return rate in function of actuarial mandatorily; (v) the compatibility between investment liquidity and cash flow of the plans; and (vi) the reasonable management costs. It also defines the ranges of volume for the different types of investments allowed for the pension funds, which are: national fixed income, national floating income, loans to participants and property, plant and equipment investments. In the fixed income portfolio, only low credit risk securities are allowed. Derivative instruments are only allowed for hedging purposes. Loans are restricted to determined credit limits. The tactic allocation is decided by the investment committee, composed of pension plans management personnel, investment manager and a member assigned by the steering committee. The execution is carried out by the financial department.

The limits established for the different types of investments allowed for pension funds are as follows:

 

SEGMENT OF THE ASSET

   BrTPREV and
Fundador/
Alternativo
    TCSPREV     PBS-A  

Fixed Income

   100   100   95

Floating Income

   20   30   30

Real estate

   8   8   8

Loans to Participants

   3   3   3

 

Page 86


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

The composition of the plans assets on December 31, 2009, is presented as follows:

 

SEGMENT OF THE ASSET

   BrTPREV  and
Fundador/
Alternativo
    TCSPREV     PBS-A  

Fixed Income

   96.25   90.98   75.13

Structured Investments

       10.45

Floating Income

     7.98   8.84

Real estate

   2.48     4.59

Loans to Participants

   1.27   1.04   0.99

Total

   100   100   100

(b) Employee profit sharing

The employee profit sharing plan was introduced in 1999, as a way to stimulate the employees to meet individual and corporate targets and thereby improve the return on investment for the shareholders. The plan comes into effect when the following targets are met:

 

   

Economic value added targets (indicators of earnings before interest, income tax, depreciation and amortization – EBITDA, as well as indicators of economic value added); and

 

   

Operational, quality and market indicators.

On December 31, 2009, the Company and its subsidiaries recorded provisions based on the estimated attainment of these targets, amounting to R$35,300 (2008– R$81,740).

 

Balance as of December 31, 2008

   83,237   

Payments made in 2009

   (92,006

Addition to provision in 2009 (Note 6)

   45,243   

Balance as of December 31, 2009

   36,474   

The differences between the provisioned amounts and the ones disclosed in the statement of operations refer to reversals or supplements of the previous year, made upon the effective payment of this benefit.

(c) Stock Options

Plan Approved on April 28, 2000

The rights vested through stock option grant documents in effect under this previously approved plan remain valid and effective, pursuant to the related terms and conditions agreed, and no new grants are allowed under this plan.

 

Page 87


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

At balance sheet date, there were outstanding exercisable options, as described in the program below:

Program B

The options guaranteed by this plan are options settled in shares.

The strike price was established by the managing committee based on the market price as of the grant date and will be monetarily adjusted by the IGP-M variation between the contracts execution date and the payment date.

The following table summarizes the operations carried out with preferred shares until December 31, 2009:

 

     In Reais
   Number of
shares
(thousands)
    Price at
the
concession
date
   Concession price
        2009    2008

Options granted in September, 2008

   79,512      17.30    18.87    19.04

Options exercised

          

Options cancelled

   (47,869        

Options outstanding on December 31, 2009

   31,643           

The following table shows the preferred shares options outstanding on December 31, 2009:

 

          Outstanding options    Exercisable options

Exercise price range at the concession date

   Number of
shares
(thousands)
   Period
remaining
(months)
   Strike
price
   Number of
shares
(thousands)
   Strike
price

R$10.00 – 19.99

   31,643    24    18.87    31,643    18.87
                        

The right to exercise the option is vested in accordance with the terms and conditions below:

 

Granting

   Adjusted
exercise
price

(in
Reais)
   Options
(in
shares)

Grant

            Lot         Exercisable
as from
   Exercise
deadline
     

   12/22/04    33   12/22/2005    12/31/2011    18.87    10,548
      33%      12/22/2006    12/31/2011    18.87    10,548
      34%      12/22/2007    12/31/2011    18.87    10,548

The fair value of the granted options was estimated on the grant date under the "Black&Scholes" options pricing model, based on the following assumptions:

 

     12/21/2004  

Backing asset

   13.64   

Strike Price

   17.30   

Expected volatility

   38.2

Risk-free interest rate

   8.4

Expected life (in years)

   2   

Dividend earnings

   3.10

Fair Value at the Grant Date

   2.76   

 

Page 88


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

According to the share based remuneration contracts, the options liquidation occurs only by the share ownership transfer (equity-settled), and the appropriations of the TNL’s and BrT’s shares options fair value must be recorded on a linear-basis, within the options maturity date. The installments corresponding to BrT beneficiaries are recorded, in these companies, on the statement of operations of the year, in counterpart to the shareholders’ equity, according to the requirements of CVM Deliberation 562/2008, which confirms the Technical Pronouncement CPC no 10 (Shared Based Remuneration).

Plan Approved on November 6, 2007

This plan authorized the grant of options, allowing to the plan participants, under certain conditions, the opportunity to purchase or subscribe, in the future and at a pre-established value, shares of a basket of shares defined as UP, which encompassed preferred shares of the Company and common and preferred shares of BrT Part. The amount of the UPs granted cannot exceed a maximum limit of 10% of the book value of each type of share of the Company.

The share option plans tied to said plan contained clauses that prescribed the acceleration of the vesting data in the event of a change in the direct or indirect shareholding control of the Company. With the change in control on January 8, 2009, the programs’ stock options were fully exercised. Program 1, totaling 2,817,324 UPs, was settled at the total amount of R$17,855. Program 2, regarding the grant of options on July 1, 2008, comprising 701,601 UPs was settled in the total amount of R$4,446.

646,585 UPs of Program 2 were exercised, related to the grant made on July 1, 2007, settled through: (i) delivery of preferred shares held in treasury by the Company, for a total exercise price of R$3,572 and cost of R$2,487; and (ii) delivery of common and preferred shares of the parent company, for a total exercise price of R$13,733 and fair value of R$17,108, plus R$130.

25. TRANSACTIONS WITH RELATED PARTIES - Parent company

Transactions with related parties are carried out at prices and terms similar to those agreed with third parties and are summarized as follow:

 

     2009    2008

Assets

     

Trade accounts receivable

   140,009    158,515

BrT Call Center

   4,251    31

BrTI

   641    97,901

BrT CS

   1,027    128

iG Brasil

   23,775    29,503

BrT Multimídia

   10,898    1,988

Brt Celular

   72,304    27,820

VANT

   2,840    1,144

iG Part

   5   

Telemar

   19,525   

Oi internet

   2,608   

 

Page 89


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

Oi Móvel

   2,135   

Loans to subsidiaries

   29,008   

BrT Call Center

   29,008   

Debentures

   1,342,313   

Telemar

   1,342,313   

Others

   21,981    24,871

BrT Call Center

   15,825    7,140

BrT Of America

   625    83

BrTI

   132    194

Brasil Telecom Participações S.A. (“BrTP”)

      1,637

BrT SCS Bermudas

   28    37

BrT CS

   17    20

BrT Venezuela

   9    12

iG Brasil

   129   

iG Cayman

   1    1

BrT Multimídia

   1,684    281

Brt Celular

   3,530    15,449

VANT

   1    17

Liabilities

     

Trade accounts payable

   165,763    84,808

BrT Call Center

   74,069    26,457

BrT Of America

   2,243    3,212

BrTI

   164    153

BrT CS

   16,736   

iG Brasil

   4,533    12,178

BrT Multimídia

   20,352    5,430

Brt Celular

   32,802    37,378

Telemar

   10,833   

Oi Móvel

   4,031   

Loans and financing

   517,248    712,213

Brt Celular

   517,021    712,213

Telemar

   227   

Others

   95,336    9,859

BrT Call Center

   1,627   

BrTI

   6,536   

BrT SCS Bermudas

   6,760    9,859

iG Brasil

   2   

BrT Multimídia

   8,310   

Brt Celular

   72,101   

Income

     

Rendered services income

   356,289    244,767

BrT Of America

      72

BrTI

   7,171    34,925

BrT SCS Bermudas

   685    422

BrT CS

   260    92

Frelance

      2,403

iG Brasil

   45,730    33,900

BrT Multimídia

   8,813    2,703

Brt Celular

   184,695    168,216

VANT

   1,694    2,034

Telemar

   57,834   

 

Page 90


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

Oi internet

   193     

Oi Móvel

   49,214     

Other operating revenue

   45,691      40,097   

BrT Call Center

   7,659      5,253   

BrTI

   45      2,690   

BrT CS

   13      39   

Frelance

     4   

iG Brasil

   3,687      1,637   

BrT Multimídia

   2,189      1,023   

Brt Celular

   32,093      29,425   

VANT

   4      26   

iG Part

   1     

Financial income

   21,722      364   

BrT Call Center

   997     

BrTI

   0      2   

Frelance

     6   

iG Brasil

   0      231   

BrT Multimídia

   2      1   

Brt Celular

   316      121   

VANT

   0      3   

Telemar

   20,407     

Costs/Expenses

    

Rendered services costs

   (662,456   (542,575

BrT Of America

   (7,032   (9,781

BrT CS

   (68,239   (57,964

BrT Multimídia

   (37,884   (38,394

Brt Celular

   (451,268   (436,436

Telemar

   (28,200  

Oi Móvel

   (69,833  

Selling expenses

   (296,166   (222,930

BrT Call Center

   (271,144   (176,816

Frelance

     (7,836

iG Brasil

   (19,528   (31,501

BrT Multimídia

   (19  

Brt Celular

   (5,475   (6,777

General and Administrative Expenses

   (19,064   (25,987

BrT Call Center

   (2,594   (3,414

Brt Celular

   (16,470   (22,573

Other operating expenses

   (413   (1,850

BrT Call Center

     (925

iG Brasil

   (413  

BrT Multimídia

     (925

Financial expenses

   (57,212   (278,922

Brasil Telecom Participações S.A. (“BrTP”)

   (3,819   (227,435

Brt Celular

   (52,011   (51,487

Telemar

   (68  

TNL

   (1,314  

 

Page 91


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

(a) Credit Lines

The lines of credit extended by the Company to its subsidiaries are for the purpose of providing them with working capital for their operational activities. The maturity dates may be renegotiated based on those companies’ projected cash flows.

The loan agreement with associate BrT Call Center, with maturity on May 20, 2010. The remuneration is equivalent to DI Rate, capitalized of a “spread” of 4.0% p.a.

The loan agreement with associate BrT Celular, with maturity on April 16, 2010. The remuneration is equivalent to 101.75% of the DI Rate.

(b) Debentures

The Company has acquired, with the merger of BrT Part, the rights before the indirect parent company regarding the subscription of private debentures not convertible into shares. Such debentures issued by Telemar, totaling R$1,200,000, have maturity on December 11, 2013. The remuneration corresponds to the CDI Rate plus 4.0% p.a. The amount receivable by the Company, on the balance sheet date, was R$1,342,313, with a financial income of R$142,313 accounted for in the year.

Transaction with BrT Celular

The subsidiary BrT Celular subscribed on March 12, 2009, private debentures not convertible into shares, issued in December 2008 by Telemar, totaling R$300,000. The maturity of these debentures is five years, on December 11, 2013. The remuneration corresponds to DI Rate capitalized of 4.0% p.a. At balance sheet date, the updated amount of receivable debentures was R$332,436, with a financial income of R$32,436 accounted for in the year.

(c) Financing Contracts with BNDES

The Company and its subsidiary BrT Móvel entered into financing contracts with BNDES, major shareholder of BNDESPart, which holds 31.4% of the voting capital of Telemar Participações S.A., the "holding" company of the Group, and that is consequently a company related to the Company.

The balance payable by the Company and its subsidiary BrT Móvel, regarding the BNDES financing, at balance sheet date was R$2,738 million. In 2009, financial expenses of R$200 million were recorded in the consolidated statements.

Additional information about contracts entered into with BNDES is described in Note 17.

(d) Rental of Transmission Infrastructure

The transactions carried out with Telemar and Oi refer to provision of services and grant of means mainly covering interconnection and EILD.

 

Page 92


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

The transactions carried out with Oi Internet, Telemar’s subsidiary, refer to the provision of rental services of Dial ports.

(e) Remuneration of Key-Management Personnel

The remuneration of the executives responsible for planning, directing and control over the Company’s activities, which include the members of the fiscal counsel and the statutory directors, are as follows:

 

     COMPANY    CONSOLIDATED
     2009    2008    2009    2008

Salaries and other current benefits

   5,460    38,530    7,074    49,579

Post-employment Benefits

      142       184

Benefits of employment contract rescission

   1,055    5,308    1,364    6,875

Share-based Remuneration (i)

   26,891    16,743    26,891    16,743
                   

Total

   33,406    60,723    35,329    73,381
                   

 

(i) The stock option plans contained terms and conditions that foresee options maturities acceleration, in the case of direct or indirect control change. After the control change, on January 8, 2009, the stock options plans were fully exercised (for more details, see note 24).

(f) Guarantees

The financings contracted with BNDES have guarantees in own receivables and endorsement from TNL. The Company recorded in the period, as commission for TNL endorsement, expenses totaling R$1,287.

26. INSURANCE

During the concession´s period, it is the concession holder´s responsibility to maintain the following insurance cover, in accordance with the contractual periods: comprehensive insurance against all risk of material damage to the insurable assets held under the concession, insurance covering the economic conditions required to continue providing the service, and insurance guaranteeing the fulfillment of all obligations regarding quality and universal access, in accordance with the provisions of the Concession Contracts. Assets and responsibilities of material value and/or high risk are covered by insurance. The Company and its subsidiaries hold insurance providing cover for material damage and loss of revenue as a result of such damage (loss of business), among other things. Management understands that the amount of the insurance cover is sufficient to ensure the integrity of the Company’s assets and going concern, as well as compliance with the rules set down in the Concession Contracts.

The insurance policies provided the following cover, according to risk and nature of the asset:

 

Page 93


Brasil Telecom S.A. and

Brasil Telecom S.A. and Subsidiaries

Notes to the Financial Statements—(Continued)

For Years Ended December 31, 2009 and 2008

(Amounts in thousands of Brazilian reais, unless otherwise stated)

 

     CONSOLIDATED

Types of Insurance

   2009    2008

Operational risk and loss of business

   800,000    500,000

Fire – Inventory

   60,000    40,000

Civil liability – Third parties (*)

   174,120    145,075

Concession guarantee

   98,291    94,601

Theft – inventory

   30,000    2,282

Civil liability – General

   15,000    20,000

Civil liability – Vehicles

   3,000   

 

(*) according to the closing exchange rate – US$ 1.7412

27. SUBSEQUENT EVENTS

As mentioned in Note 17, on March 11, 2010, approval was given to the non-applicability of certain financial ratios of Debentures of the fifth issuance.

28. EXPLANATION ADDED FOR TRANSLATION INTO ENGLISH

The accompanying financial statements are presented in conformity with Brazilian accounting practices (Note 3). Certain accounting practices adopted by the Company that conform to those accounting practices applied in Brazil may not conform to generally accepted accounting principles in other countries where these financial statements may be used.

 

Page 94


SIGNATURES

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.

Date: May 26, 2010

 

BRASIL TELECOM S.A.
By   /S/    JOÃO FRANCISCO DA SILVEIRA NETO        
Name:  

João Francisco da Silveira Neto

Title:   Officer
By   /S/    JULIO CESAR PINTO        
Name:   Julio Cesar Pinto
Title:   Officer