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Friday, August 31, 2018

What Is The Peso Worth?

What's a Peso Worth? All Bets Are Off as Argentina Pain Spreads



“There’s no clear price reference after the peso plunge.”
Tommy Samson is explaining why he’s been forced to scale back business amid Argentina’s financial-market rout. His Buenos Aires firm imports surgical equipment such as sutures for stitching wounds, paying in foreign currency. Then he sells them to local customers in pesos.
The last link in that chain is breaking down as Argentina’s free-falling currency threatens to spread havoc throughout a $640 billion economy. A 20 percent plunge this week alone stoked a fresh sense of urgency, and the International Monetary Fund promised its “full support” Friday after a new appeal from President Mauricio Macri.
Business and household finances are feeling the strain, and the crisis is casting a shadow over Macri’s prospects of winning re-election next year. Even Argentina’s most market-friendly leader in more than a decade has struggled to restore investor confidence.
His policy makers have been trying. The central bank raised interest rates to 60 percent on Thursday, the world’s highest. A day earlier, Macri had shocked the nation –- and investors -- with an appeal for quicker payouts from the International Monetary Fund.
The Fund said on Friday that Argentina has its “full support.” It said high-level talks will start on Tuesday, with the aim of rapidly submitting a revised economic plan to the IMF board.
Argentina’s $50 billion loan agreement in June was the biggest in IMF history. The country was also on an IMF program when it crashed and defaulted in 2001. That was the catalyst for more than a decade of budget-busting left-populist government – and isolation from world financial markets, something that ended with Macri’s election in 2015.
Maria de los Angeles Rezk voted for him -– “but I wouldn’t do it again.’’
“I see a country that’s lost its way,’’ said Rezk, a 46-year-old bank worker in the capital, shortly after buying some dollars. She said she was waiting to sell them later, expecting the peso to keep weakening.
“They need to find a way to stop this slide,’’ she said. “The problem is, they don’t know what to say.’’
Warning lights were flashing before the latest market turmoil. The government was forecasting that the economy would contract 1 percent in 2018, a sharp deterioration from the 3 percent growth that was predicted at the start of this year.
Inflation has stuck above 30 percent and is set to accelerate on a weaker peso. Even for businesses that buy locally, it’s a struggle to keep up.
Pablo Ricatti says he bought two truckloads of flour two weeks ago, “to hedge myself from a price hike.’’
His supplier would usually provide financing for a couple of weeks, “but now they won’t,’’ says Ricatti, who runs a company that makes rolls for burgers and hot dogs. “I have to pay them right away. And I will,’’ he said, because prices are rising “as we speak.’’
Even significantly larger businesses are finding it hard to see far ahead.
TN&Platex is Argentina’s biggest textile company. It’s able to quote prices for buyers that have the money to pay right now, says Chief Executive Officer Teddy Karagozian. But the currency volatility means he can’t offer the usual 60- or 90-day credit to clients, Karagozian said.
If the peso’s slump is slowing the economy, government counter-measures may have the same effect.
Macri’s pre-crisis plan was to chip away gradually at Argentina’s budget deficit, lowering it from 6.5 percent of GDP last year to 3.8 percent in 2019.

‘Find a Solution’

Nicolas Dujovne
Photographer: Sarah Pabst/Bloomberg
More drastic cuts are now likely. Treasury Minister Nicolas Dujovne told reporters late Thursday that the government will release its plan for a “substantially lower” deficit target for 2019, below 1.3 percent of GDP, on Monday. He will then travel to Washington to meet with IMF officials. No details were provided.
With inflation accelerating, the government’s negotiations with unions on public pay are likely to be “extremely difficult,’’ said Paul Greer, a money manager at Fidelity International in London, in an email. He predicted “general labor strikes over the next year.’’
Outside the office of pension administrator Anses in Buenos Aires, union leader Ruben Garrido was among a group of protesters. “Our salaries are constantly eroding,’’ the 62-year-old said. And pension funds are getting hit by the slump on stock and bond markets, he said. “It’s hardly sustainable.’’
Higher up the income scale, in an economy that’s highly unequal like most of its Latin American peers, is Alicia Quadri, a dance teacher and former star ballerina at the prestigious Teatro Colon.
“I was hoping to go to Europe with my daughter at the end of the year,’’ she said. “With this exchange rate, I won’t. I’ll wait for things to calm down.’’
When, and how, will that happen? Quadri wasn’t sure.
“They need to get all the major stakeholders, the best economists, to find a solution,’’ she said. “But not the IMF, or outsiders. They’ll only make the country take on more debt. And they don’t live through the consequences.’’

Gabriel And The Mountain-A Young Brasilian Man's Last Days In Africa

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT // MOVIES

‘Gabriel and the Mountain’ looks at a young man’s last days in Africa

“Gabriel and the Mountain” — a meandering yet fascinating account of a young traveler’s death in Africa — is a hybrid documentary-narrative with a twist: Actors play the two main roles, re-creating scenes with the real people who encountered the traveler in his final days.
It’s a conceit that works seamlessly, and the effect is often haunting, even if the narrative firepower fizzles in portions of the ambitious, beautifully photographed film.
Director Fellipe Barbosa begins the true story in 2009 on the lush slopes of Mount Mulanje in Malawi, where field workers discover the body of Brazilian Gabriel Buchmann. Then we go 70 days earlier, when Gabriel — taking a year off from school to purportedly study poverty in Africa — is staying with a family in Kenya.
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The friendly Gabriel (Joao Pedro Zappa, convincing) appears to have never met a stranger, and disdaining anything “touristy,” he attempts to immerse himself in the local scene by hunting for rabbits and wearing traditional African dress. It’s a naive gesture, one of youthful pretension and unwitting self-entitlement.

Gabriel and the Mountain

POLITE APPLAUSEDrama, documentary-narrative. Starring Joao Pedro Zappa, Caroline Abras. Directed by Fellipe Barbosa. In Portuguese, Swahili, French and English, with English subtitles. (Not rated. 127 minutes.)
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Eventually, Gabriel moves on to Tanzania for a rendezvous with his girlfriend, Cristina (Caroline Abras, very good), and there, they alternately bicker and show genuine affection for each other. Zappa and Abras have a lively chemistry, and when she exits before the final act, it reminds us that Gabriel’s fleeting interactions with the local residents, though convincingly realized, aren’t nearly as captivating.
In the scenes with the locals, we see snippets of Gabriel’s character, but the moments don’t drive the story along, as much as get him from point to point.
Barbosa is much more interested in examining the many sides of Gabriel — he knew the young man personally — than in solving the mystery of what happened on the Malawi mountainside.
Yet even if the proceedings sometime feel like a travelogue, the reconstructions of Gabriel’s last days alive, down to the exact locations and personal interactions, leave a strong impression.
David Lewis is a Bay Area freelance writer.

Investing In Argentina???????

but our thoughts are elsewhere today, Dear Reader, drifting by the banks of the Rio de la Plata, across the fertile Pampas, down to poor ol’ Argentina.

That way crisis cometh…once again.

Recently, while musing on the topic of currency arbitrage, we wondered whether it wasn’t time to consider a return to the “Paris of the South,” as Argentina’s capital, Buenos Aires, is sometimes called.

The Argentine peso has been under intense pressure of late, you see. That’s good news for dollar earners/savers…but bad news for local porteƱos, trying to make ends meet with peso-printed paper.

Last we checked in, Latin America’s second worst currency (behind only Venezuela’s hyper-inflated Bolivar), was in dire straits.

Then, yesterday, bad turned to worse…and stumbled drunkenly off a cliff.

Here’s Bloomberg:


Argentina’s currency crisis intensified on Thursday as the peso plunged 20 percent in a rout that only accelerated after the central bank tried to shore up confidence with an emergency increase in interest rates.

The bank raised its benchmark measure to a global high of 60 percent, the latest attempt by policy makers to defend a currency that’s lost more than half its value this year. A day earlier, President Mauricio Macri shocked the country with an appeal for quicker payouts from the International Monetary Fund, which said it’s considering the request.

Argentina is crashing back into the kind of financial turmoil that Macri’s market-friendly government had supposedly left behind. Investors are running out of faith that the president, who came to power in December 2015 after more than a decade of budget-busting populism, can shore up the economy and bring Argentina’s fiscal and trade deficits, and its inflation rate, to manageable levels.


Had you walked into an Argentine bank on Tuesday afternoon, you could have bought the local scrip at a rate of roughly 30 pesos per U.S. dollar. By market close yesterday, that very same Greenback would have bought you more than 40 pesos.

This is what currency collapse looks like. The long-suffering gauchos recognize it well enough. They’ve been here plenty of times before (most recently in the early ‘90’s…and again not one decade later.)

At first, the pace is slow and measured; a gentle canter. “We’ve got it under control,” say the feds, crop firmly in hand. “It’s all part of a long-term strategy. Trust us.”

Next, momentum swiftly gathers… a canter becomes a gallop and the wind begins to rush by… then the reins suddenly tighten and… SNAP!

Before the rider knows what’s happened, his horse has bolted and he’s flat on his culo, gasping for breath in the beast’s kicked-up dust.

Your editor has a soft spot for Argentina…as he does for down-and-outers, ne’re-do-wells, earnest underperformers and angels fallen from grace in general. 

We moved there in 2010, in fact, largely to further our (ongoing) studies in bubble economics and cheerful human folly. The country is rich in examples of precisely what not to dovis-Ć -vis fiscal/monetary policy. Any policy, really.

And so it serves as a useful classroom. Gresham’s Law, for example, holds that “bad money drives out good.” All else being equal, people tend to save and invest in currencies they perceive to be stable, deflationary, even…and to spend that money which loses its value over time.

In Argentina, to this day, the wealthy preserve their capital by stashing it away in dollars… or gold… or dollar-denominated assets (most local real estate transactions are settled on dollar terms, for example). The crumpled pesos they happily blow on juicy steaks and discounted Malbec.

And ¡Salud! to that, say we.

So what about investment opportunities? Aside from considering spending some time in the recently discounted locale, is it time to deploy some capital in the Argentine markets?

“Nope,” says our good friend and man-on-the scene, Rob Marstrand. “Not with inflation running at 30% and with all the current uncertainty.”

An Englishman abroad, Rob lives and works in Buenos Aires, where he and his team produce the OfWealth newsletter.

Continues Rob on the situation there…

“An earnings yield of just 9% simply isn’t enough. As a reminder, US stocks traded in single [price-to-earnings - P/E] digits in the late 70s / early 80s when inflation was in the high teens.

“There will be a moment when Argentine stocks will be set up for massive profits. Historically speaking, countries with the weakest currencies in the past year have tended to deliver the very best (dollar) results over the next five years…

“But investors should wait for the dust to settle first - perhaps in 3 to 6 months (although only time will tell). Speculators still have Argentina in their sights...but no longer in a good way.”

In the meantime, Rob concludes, “local prices, in dollar terms, are down about 40% from this time last year, even accounting for peso price inflation. For the international visitor, this is the cheapest it’s been for many, many years.”

Hmm… anyone in for an unhurried steak lunch?

First glass of Malbec is on us!

Of course, it’s not only the purchasing power of your money over which the State claims ultimate control…they also declare jurisdiction over your body, including what you may or may not put into it and under what circumstances. Consider the War on Some Drugs…as Doug Casey does in today’s feature column, below. Please enjoy…

Venezuela: A United Frontier

VENEZUELA

United Frontier

Officials in Colombia, Peru and Ecuador are working to develop a coordinated response to the mass exodus of refugees from Venezuela in meetings that could also impact the future of embattled Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro.
On the agenda at meetings being held in all three countries are measures to prevent epidemics, harmonize identification requirements and share the burden of relief, Bloomberg reported.
More than 1.6 million people have fled Venezuela since 2015 according to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. About the same number of migrants arrived in Europe, mostly fleeing chaos in North Africa and the Middle East, in the same period.
This week, officials from Colombia, Peru, Ecuador and Brazil met in Bogota to discuss joint strategies on health care, schooling and employment for migrants. At further meetings in Lima, officials discussed approaching the UN and the Red Cross for greater financial and logistical support.
Meanwhile, Peru and Argentina this month agreed to join Chile, Colombia and Paraguay in accusing Maduro of crimes against humanity at the International Criminal Court in the Hague.

DI

Thursday, August 30, 2018

Kirschner's Revenge

ARGENTINA

Kirschner’s Revenge

A recent police raid on former Argentine President Cristina FernĆ”ndez de Kirchner’s properties is a reminder that criminal investigations have become weapons in the battle for the hearts and souls of nations throughout South America.
As the BBC explained, the raid stemmed from the discovery of notebooks kept by a driver who claimed he regularly drove public officials carrying bags of cash to FernĆ”ndez de Kirchner and her late husband, former President NĆ©stor Kirchner. Prosecutors allege the Kirchners illegally received around $160 million.
FernĆ”ndez de Kirchner, now a left-wing Peronist senator, denied the allegations, saying President Mauricio Macri, a conservative whom the New York Times described as her “longtime political nemesis,” was using the courts against her.
“If there was one thing missing to install political persecution and the use of the judicial authorities as an instrument of political persecution in Argentina, it was this case,” she said.
She and other leftist voices in the region – like TeleSur, a television network funded primarily by the socialist government of Venezuela – compared her plight to the proceedings used against left-wing politicians Dilma Rousseff and Luiz InĆ”cio Lula Da Silva in Brazil and Rafael Correa in Ecuador.
Brazilian lawmakers removed Rousseff from office in 2016 for allegedly misappropriating public funds, charges the Intercept argued were laughable given the depth of corruption in Brazilian politics.
“By removing Dilma, they knowingly empowered actual criminals and gangsters, people whose thieving and mobster behavior make Dilma’s budgetary tricks look like jaywalking,” wrote the website.
Lula is serving a 12-year sentence for graft but still running his Workers’ Party in the run-up to Brazil’s general elections this fall from his prison cell. He’s among the most popular candidates for president, Reuters reported. Rousseff is running for a seat in the Brazilian senate, too.
An Ecuadorean court has ordered the arrest of Correa, who was president of that country from 2007 to 2017, on charges of being involved in kidnapping an opponent. He now lives in Belgium and denies the allegations.
FernĆ”ndez de Kirchner, Rousseff, Lula and Correa are all leftists whose policies strove to redistribute wealth downward, an appealing platform among the impoverished that irked representatives of the countries’ business interests.
It’s unclear if the four former leaders are guilty of corrupt practices.
But their policies have caused problems.
Argentine President Macri is now struggling to impose the austerity measures that are part of a $50 billion International Monetary Fund loan that he said was necessary to reorganize the government’s finances amid punishing inflation and a plunge in the local currency, the Financial Times wrote.
Some of the blame for Argentina’s current troubles certainly lies with previous administrations, Foreign Policy argued.
FernƔndez de Kirchner might go to jail someday. But it seems she has already wrought her revenge.

Wednesday, August 22, 2018

Venezuela: The Strong Bank Notes(?)

VENEZUELA

The ‘Strong’ Banknotes

Business ground to a halt in Venezuela Tuesday as citizens and shopkeepers struggled to deal with the introduction of a new currency called the “sovereign bolivar.”
Thousands of firms remained closed and many workers stayed home as a result, the BBC reported.
A reaction to – and supposed cure for – runaway inflation, the “sovereign bolivar” chops five zeros off the inaptly named “strong bolivar,” so a cup of coffee that used to cost 2.5 million strong bolivars now costs 25 sovereign bolivars. Citizens said they were restricted from withdrawing more than 10 sovereign bolivars from bank machines on Tuesday, however.
An opposition call for nationwide protests was only partially successful, the Washington Post reported.
There are already signs that the devaluation and President Nicolas Maduro’s other recently announced measures won’t solve the problem, as prices for some goods have already doubled since the announcement of the new currency on Friday.

Rio de Janeiro: Mean Street Fighting

BRAZIL

Street Fighting Men

Brazil doubled down on its aggressive strategy for combating drug-related violence Monday in the wake of a report flagging a spike in murders and the number of people killed in confrontations with police since it deployed federal troops in Rio de Janeiro six months ago.
At least five civilians and one soldier died in shootouts in northern Rio de Janeiro Monday and at least six suspected gangsters were killed the same day near a bridge linking Rio and the neighboring city of Niteroi as the authorities deployed some 4,200 soldiers and 70 police, as well as armored vehicles and aircraft, in early morning raids, Reuters reported.
“The operations are ongoing and there could be more deaths,” the army said in an email to the news agency.
President Michel Temer announced emergency measures that allowed the military to assume control of policing in the state of Rio de Janeiro a little more than six months ago to try to quell drug-related violence. Murders rose 5 percent and the number of people killed in confrontations with police spiked 35 percent since the decision.