Bad times for Argentina This is not a trade I am making. There's not liquidity for this and even if there was my desire to remain sane would make me very wary of fading this. With that being said, purely as a TA stress test exercise, I think this is a high. Shortby holeyprofit112
How much Purchasing Power will Argentina lose in 2023? Argentina lost 9% of purchasing power in last 31 daysby CashflowAllan0
USDARS long this is a perfect trend ,huh? Let profits RUN!Strategy Bullish Higher Highs Higher Lows Retracement (10%) Price above Quartely VWAP Price above Decade VWAP Volatility Bullish Maket Sentiment 98% Bullish Yearly Trend Bullish Quartely Trend Bullish Monthly Bullish Daily Bullish 4H Bullish 2H Bullish 1H Bullish 30 min. Bullish Portfolio Strategy: Volatility/Risk(Per Trade) Position Sizing Risk Management 2: Trailing Stop (Donchian/Turtle Trader)/N(Volatility(Per Day) or (Quarter)*(risk per Trade) William Jackson, chief emerging markets economist at Capital Economics, also noted that shocks from the El Nino weather pattern could prompt inflation in central and south American regions to cool more slowly than previously expected. "Latin American central banks are unlikely to look through food price shocks given how strong headline inflation and wage growth in the region still are. So, upside inflation surprises could postpone the upcoming monetary easing cycles, or make them more gradual." The Mexican peso slipped 0.4% and was set to snap a four-day winning streak, after touching its highest level since early December 2015 on Wednesday. The MSCI gauge for Latam stocks (.MILA00000PUS) gained 1.3%, led by a 1.4% advance in Brazil's Bovespa IBOV . Foreigners funneled over $22 billion net into emerging market portfolios in June, the largest amount since January, according to data from the Institute of International Finance. A Guatemalan court ordered the suspension of anti-graft presidential candidate Bernardo Arevalo's political party, threatening his place in a run-off vote and prompting U.S. warnings of a challenge to democracy. Elsewhere, the International Monetary Fund's executive board has approved an immediate $189 million disbursement to Zambia following its first review of a $1.3 billion loan programme. Latam FX hits 10-year high on weak dollar as US inflation slows The index for Latin American currencies touched a 10-year high on Wednesday, led by Brazil's real, as the dollar dwindled after a U.S. inflation reading indicated just one more interest rate hike by the Federal Reserve this year. The MSCI index for Latam currencies (.MILA00000CUS) jumped 1.6%, hitting its highest level since April 2013. Most currencies hit multi-year highs against a weakening dollar after June U.S. consumer prices rose at their smallest annual pace in over two years. Although talks of rate cuts have intensified in Latam of late, bets on the U.S. rate-hiking cycle coming to an end will likely lead to a favorable interest rates differential. The Mexican peso USDMXN jumped 1%, breaking below the psychological barrier of 17 pesos per dollar, touching an eight year high. Higher crude oil prices also boosted the Mexican peso and top exporter Colombia's peso USDCOP by 0.8%. Copper prices hit 2-1/2-week highs, boosting currencies of main exporters. Chile's peso USDCLP added 0.7% and Peru's sol USDPEN rose 1.3%, to its highest level since November 2020. Peru's central bank is set to decide on policy rates on Thursday. Chile's Finance Minister Mario Marcel said the government now expects gross domestic product (GDP) to grow 0.2% in 2023, revising its forecast down from a previous estimate of 0.3%. The Brazilian real (BRBY) USDBRL gained 0.8%, touching a one-week high. The rapporteur for Brazil's tax reform bill in the Senate, Eduardo Braga, on Tuesday said that he expects the proposal to be voted on in October in the House. Data showed Brazil's services activity grew by much more than expected in May, paring some losses seen in April despite high interest rates. "Progress on the structural reform agenda and the (Brazil) government decision to maintain the CPI target at 3% have cleared the way for rate cuts; we expect a 50bps cut on August 2," said Lawrence Brainard, chief EM economist at TS Lombard. Meanwhile, Argentine polling firms warned of difficulties accurately predicting the upcoming presidential primaries' results due to low turnout and the emergence of surprise candidates, leaving the October election also uncertain. The MSCI index for Latam stocks (.MILA00000PUS) jumped 2.5%, touching a one-week high, led by a 1.4% advance Brazil's Bovespa IBOV . World's largest meat packer JBS SA JBSS3 jumped 9% after proposing a New York listing. Separately, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) approved a $3 billion, nine-month bailout programme for Pakistan. YEN Oil AUD NZD Asian stocks fall on bad chinese data China Industrial Output Growth Beats Estimates The Chinese economy advanced 6.3% yoy in Q2 of 2023, faster than a 4.5% growth in Q1 but missing market estimates of 7.3%. The latest figures were distorted by a low base of comparison last year when Shanghai and other big cities were in strict lockdown. During H1, the economy grew by 5.5%. China has set a GDP growth target of around 5% for this year after the economy expanded by 3% in 2022 and missed the government's target of about 5.5%. Beijing has shown reluctance to launch greater stimulus, especially as local government debt has soared. In June alone, indicators showed a mixed picture: retail sales rose the least in 5 months, industrial output growth grew for the 14th month, and the urban jobless rate was unchanged at 5.2% but youth unemployment hit a new high of 21.3%. Data released earlier showed shipments from China fell the most in three years, as high inflation in key markets and geopolitics hit foreign demand. A Politburo meeting is expected later this month. Asian Stocks Fall on Weak Chinese Data Asian equity markets fell on Monday as investors reacted to key data showing China’s economy grew 6.3% in the second quarter, lower than the 7.3% expansion expected by analysts. The Shanghai Composite led the decline, losing more than 1%. The Shenzhen Component, S&P/ASX 200 and Kospi indexes also tumbled. Meanwhile, Japanese markets are closed for a holiday, while Hong Kong markets will likely be closed for the day due to a typhoon. China Stocks Drop on Weak GDP Data The Shanghai Composite dropped 1.1% to around 3,200 while the Shenzhen Component lost 0.8% to 10,990 on Monday, giving back gains from last week as investors reacted to key data showing China’s economy grew 6.3% in the second quarter, lower than the 7.3% expansion expected by analysts. Meanwhile, China’s industrial production and fixed asset investments increased more than anticipated, while retail sales missed forecasts. Mainland stocks gained last week amid hopes that a faltering post-pandemic recovery would prompt Beijing to offer more pro-growth policy measures. Commodity-linked and financial stocks led the decline, with notable losses from Yunnan Lincang (-3.5%), Zijin Mining (-1.5%), China Shenhua Energy (-4.5%), ICBC (-6%), Ping An Insurance (-1%) and China Merchants Bank (-1.1%). Longby DaveBrascoFXUpdated 0
ARSUSD ShortStrategy bearish lower Highs lower Lows Retracement (10%) Price below Quartely VWAP Price below Decade VWAP Volatility bearish Maket Sentiment 98% bearish Yearly Trend bearish Quartely Trend bearish Monthly bearish Daily bearish 4H bearish 2H bearish 1H bearish 30 min. bearish Portfolio Strategy: Volatility/Risk(Per Trade) Position Sizing Risk Management 2: Trailing Stop (Donchian/Turtle Trader)/N(Volatility(Per Day) or (Quarter)*(risk per Trade) William Jackson, chief emerging markets economist at Capital Economics, also noted that shocks from the El Nino weather pattern could prompt inflation in central and south American regions to cool more slowly than previously expected. "Latin American central banks are unlikely to look through food price shocks given how strong headline inflation and wage growth in the region still are. So, upside inflation surprises could postpone the upcoming monetary easing cycles, or make them more gradual." The Mexican peso slipped 0.4% and was set to snap a four-day winning streak, after touching its highest level since early December 2015 on Wednesday. The MSCI gauge for Latam stocks (.MILA00000PUS) gained 1.3%, led by a 1.4% advance in Brazil's Bovespa IBOV . Foreigners funneled over $22 billion net into emerging market portfolios in June, the largest amount since January, according to data from the Institute of International Finance. A Guatemalan court ordered the suspension of anti-graft presidential candidate Bernardo Arevalo's political party, threatening his place in a run-off vote and prompting U.S. warnings of a challenge to democracy. Elsewhere, the International Monetary Fund's executive board has approved an immediate $189 million disbursement to Zambia following its first review of a $1.3 billion loan programme. Latam FX hits 10-year high on weak dollar as US inflation slows The index for Latin American currencies touched a 10-year high on Wednesday, led by Brazil's real, as the dollar dwindled after a U.S. inflation reading indicated just one more interest rate hike by the Federal Reserve this year. The MSCI index for Latam currencies (.MILA00000CUS) jumped 1.6%, hitting its highest level since April 2013. Most currencies hit multi-year highs against a weakening dollar after June U.S. consumer prices rose at their smallest annual pace in over two years. Although talks of rate cuts have intensified in Latam of late, bets on the U.S. rate-hiking cycle coming to an end will likely lead to a favorable interest rates differential. The Mexican peso USDMXN jumped 1%, breaking below the psychological barrier of 17 pesos per dollar, touching an eight year high. Higher crude oil prices also boosted the Mexican peso and top exporter Colombia's peso USDCOP by 0.8%. Copper prices hit 2-1/2-week highs, boosting currencies of main exporters. Chile's peso USDCLP added 0.7% and Peru's sol USDPEN rose 1.3%, to its highest level since November 2020. Peru's central bank is set to decide on policy rates on Thursday. Chile's Finance Minister Mario Marcel said the government now expects gross domestic product (GDP) to grow 0.2% in 2023, revising its forecast down from a previous estimate of 0.3%. The Brazilian real (BRBY) USDBRL gained 0.8%, touching a one-week high. The rapporteur for Brazil's tax reform bill in the Senate, Eduardo Braga, on Tuesday said that he expects the proposal to be voted on in October in the House. Data showed Brazil's services activity grew by much more than expected in May, paring some losses seen in April despite high interest rates. "Progress on the structural reform agenda and the (Brazil) government decision to maintain the CPI target at 3% have cleared the way for rate cuts; we expect a 50bps cut on August 2," said Lawrence Brainard, chief EM economist at TS Lombard. Meanwhile, Argentine polling firms warned of difficulties accurately predicting the upcoming presidential primaries' results due to low turnout and the emergence of surprise candidates, leaving the October election also uncertain. The MSCI index for Latam stocks (.MILA00000PUS) jumped 2.5%, touching a one-week high, led by a 1.4% advance Brazil's Bovespa IBOV . World's largest meat packer JBS SA JBSS3 jumped 9% after proposing a New York listing. Separately, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) approved a $3 billion, nine-month bailout programme for Pakistan. YEN Oil AUD NZD Asian stocks fall on bad chinese data China Industrial Output Growth Beats Estimates The Chinese economy advanced 6.3% yoy in Q2 of 2023, faster than a 4.5% growth in Q1 but missing market estimates of 7.3%. The latest figures were distorted by a low base of comparison last year when Shanghai and other big cities were in strict lockdown. During H1, the economy grew by 5.5%. China has set a GDP growth target of around 5% for this year after the economy expanded by 3% in 2022 and missed the government's target of about 5.5%. Beijing has shown reluctance to launch greater stimulus, especially as local government debt has soared. In June alone, indicators showed a mixed picture: retail sales rose the least in 5 months, industrial output growth grew for the 14th month, and the urban jobless rate was unchanged at 5.2% but youth unemployment hit a new high of 21.3%. Data released earlier showed shipments from China fell the most in three years, as high inflation in key markets and geopolitics hit foreign demand. A Politburo meeting is expected later this month. Asian Stocks Fall on Weak Chinese Data Asian equity markets fell on Monday as investors reacted to key data showing China’s economy grew 6.3% in the second quarter, lower than the 7.3% expansion expected by analysts. The Shanghai Composite led the decline, losing more than 1%. The Shenzhen Component, S&P/ASX 200 and Kospi indexes also tumbled. Meanwhile, Japanese markets are closed for a holiday, while Hong Kong markets will likely be closed for the day due to a typhoon. China Stocks Drop on Weak GDP Data The Shanghai Composite dropped 1.1% to around 3,200 while the Shenzhen Component lost 0.8% to 10,990 on Monday, giving back gains from last week as investors reacted to key data showing China’s economy grew 6.3% in the second quarter, lower than the 7.3% expansion expected by analysts. Meanwhile, China’s industrial production and fixed asset investments increased more than anticipated, while retail sales missed forecasts. Mainland stocks gained last week amid hopes that a faltering post-pandemic recovery would prompt Beijing to offer more pro-growth policy measures. Commodity-linked and financial stocks led the decline, with notable losses from Yunnan Lincang (-3.5%), Zijin Mining (-1.5%), China Shenhua Energy (-4.5%), ICBC (-6%), Ping An Insurance (-1%) and China Merchants Bank (-1.1%). Shortby DaveBrascoFXUpdated 112
USDARS LONG USDARS BULLISH SINCE YEARS See the chart The Argentine peso has had a tumultuous life. In the 1980s it was temporarily dethroned by a new currency called the austral. An arranged marriage with the dollar in 1991 produced some years of bliss but ended in a ruinous divorce. More recently, the peso has suffered the humiliation of being tagged the worst-performing currency in emerging markets. Now an Argentine economist running for president is proposing to put the currency out of its misery once and for all. Javier Milei, who’s also a congressman, says that to quash triple-digit inflation, the nation should formally adopt the dollar. “The peso melts like ice in the Sahara Desert,” Milei likes to say, alluding to the currency’s rapid depreciation: It’s lost half of its value against the dollar just in the past year. Trend Bullish Whatever trend trading methode you know,it works here! Longby DaveBrascoFXUpdated 3
USDARS SUPER BULLISHTechnical Analysis Trend Bullish Weekly Long Daily Long 10H Long 4H Long 2 H Long 30min. LONG Strategy Bullish My Trading Conditions and my Rules(This are the Rules I follow,and they are no financial adivice for others) Trade Consditions Higher Highs Higher Lows Trade Rules: Taking only Buy Signals Trade Rule 2: Only Buy Signals Trade Rule 3: Exit only, if a Pullback my Stops hit. Japanese Shares Rise as US Inflation Eases The Nikkei 225 Index jumped 0.8% to above 32,200 while the broader Topix Index gained 0.3% to 2,228 on Thursday, rising from one-month lows and tracking a rally on Wall Street overnight as cooler-than-expected US inflation data raised hopes that the Federal Reserve is closer to the end of its tightening cycle. Investors also bought back technology stocks following days of consolidation, with notable gains from SoftBank Group (1.9%), Advantest (1.4%), Socionext (2.8%), Tokyo Electron (0.6%), Z Holdings (2.8%) and Renesas Electronics (2.5%). Other index heavyweights also advanced, including Sony Group (4.5%), Fast Retailing (1%), Daiichi Sankyo (4.5%), Mitsui & Co (1%) and Eisai Co (1.6%). Australia Inflation Expectations Stable inJuly NZX Trades Slightly Higher New Zealand Factory Activity Shrinks to 7-Month Low Argentina Indicators Industrial Production 1.1 1.8 percent May/23 Industrial Production Mom 1.2 3.2 percent Apr/23 Capacity Utilization 68.9 67.3 percent Apr/23 Changes in Inventories -20633 20148 ARS Million Mar/23 Car Production 53282 54399 Units May/23 Car Registrations 38.6 33.8 Thousand May/23 Leading Economic Index -0.48 -0.28 percent May/23 Corruption Index 38 38 Points Dec/22 Corruption Rank 94 96 Dec/22 The Turkish lira extended losses to new all-time lows of 26.2 per USD, amid increasing signs of a shift to a more orthodox approach and as the central bank reportedly stopped using its reserves to support the currency. On June 22nd, the central bank of Turkey raised interest rates by 650 bps to 15%, marking a reversal from its previous ultra-loose and unorthodox monetary policy although the move fell short of meeting market expectations for a higher rate of 21%. Few days later, policymakers loosened measures designed to boost the lira, including lowering the securities maintenance ratio to 5% from 10% and the threshold for the share of lira deposits to 57% from 60%.Longby DaveBrascoFXUpdated 3
Argentine PESO Brutal Debasement against USD Argentina attempts to lock it's population into the declining Peso. cointelegraph.com Sound money will endure The easiest way to short FIAT/ARS is to Buy Bitcoin. #Bitcoin #BTC Shortby Stormrake0
USD/ARS What a trend huh?!Over the last 12 months, its price rose by 75.70 percentLongby ForexCompany2
Burning Soy Dollars for Heat this ChristmasIntroduction I originally published this piece on September 8th, 2022, when the Peso was at ~140:1. I am republishing it to TradingView to celebrate the 170:1 mark, made possible with consistent advances to TradingView's Idea publishing. I believe we will continue to see devaluation of Argentina's currency as a deterioration in commodity prices continues, along with regaining strength in the US Dollar. Please enjoy, and feel free to leave any questions or comments! Thesis The Soy-Dollar is another example of Argentina doing it to themselves. The country recently announced an exchange rate of 200 Pesos to 1 US Dollar for ~1 month timeframe, a dramatic benefit over the "open-market" 140:1. Argentina has a majority of it's economy driven on soybean farming, this isn't a niche market-pull. Altogether, the move comes as questions are being raised on the Treasury's ability to pay Dollar debts, threatening further depreciations against a currency that has suffered already. Argentina devaluing it's own currency to a major percentage of it's economy is one strike, doing the move when being questioned on finances is another, but leading it's own crises was the only one needed for a country batting badly in a t-ball league. The last ten years have been a whirl, but their hyperinflation has been so tremendous that I can only sympathize for a population with 37% risk of suffering from a mental illness in their lifetime (as of 2018, and conditions have gotten so very much worse). It feels terrible to call out destructive policies and watch them unfold, but this was a bad move. I cannot imagine arguing against a >140-200 Peso to Dollar rate after offering it to a majority of the economy, even for such a short time. A 30% currency devaluation by the bank isn't just a show of weakness, it's desperation to find a floor for their currency crisis. Showing favouritism to one market is going to kill diversification, something they needed to push for before with China ramping up their domestic soybean production by 40% in 2025. Their major importers are all suffering their own currency crises, few with direct swap lines with the Federal Reserve. Dollars are the blood of international trade, and they are drying up in critical emerging markets. But Argentina did it to themselves. An interest rate of 3.5% is scaring the largest banks in the world and the US Treasury Secretary, Argentinians haven't had an interest rate under 20% in 5 years, currently sitting at 69.5%, which is under their Inflation rate YoY at 71%. Economies need to be able to experiment and fail in ventures; slap bracelets and fidget spinners are analogous to VR headsets and TACODOGCOIN for the economic participants to create an environment of willful employment-spend cycle. Will to work can be internal and external, sometimes getting the right carrot is better than buying an electric baton. Argentina does not get to experiment in business, so Argentina does not get to evolve. Argentina suffers from critical capital allocation issues - money is easily siphoned off (and rewarded) by different tax havens across the Western hemisphere, US included - but nothing that cannot be overcome so much so that they need to persistently suffocate their own economy. In a previous Vignette I showed off a model for "Exporting-Importing Inflation", that is if a country is applying global inflationary pressures or absorbing them. Argentina has consistently pushed prices up for it's exports, an economy that should do amazingly well in an era of elevated soybean prices, but doesn't. International pressures aside, Argentina isn't a bastion of risk-free business even with a more competent central bank. Again, recent studies have highlighted the elevated anxiety and depression risks in bad economic climates, and Argentina's first-to-date psychological survey done in 2018 underscored a people suffering. Whatever price pressures Argentina is adding to the system isn't resulting in localized health, indicating a serious bleed - again not surprising given businesses have to contend with >50% interest rates. Money Supply in Argentinian terms has grown at a logarithmic rate, right in step with the Peso's devaluation. But in "real" *USD* terms, the money supply has decreased. An oddity given external debt has only doubled, while GDP has (until 2018) had positive growth and in USD, superseding external debt (until 2018). And 2018 is really when things seem to have hit the fan for the country - bank strikes, general labor strikes, political uprisings with questionable arrests and charges across parties. Many of my research notes have looked at temporality of crises, in that events are rarely spontaneous. Balance of Trade and FX reserves reveal Argentina walked away from the GFC only to suffer from the Global recession afterwards. The country failed to find footing in the changed environment, had years of economic denigration leading to a lengthy period of recessionary behaviours. I believe Argentina is in an economic depression, likely starting in ~2013. Decreasing money supplies means the central bank has been diluting the value with a net system-loss effect. The situation is bad, unlikely to improve soon. Argentina is suffering from a confidence issue; external investors are not confident Argentina will be able to pay debts (fair) and question future economic health (also fair), while internal consumers are suffering from hyperinflation tearing away at the value of their currency with a sustained environment against consumer spending. AND IT SHOWS. Consumer spending has dropped in real terms to nothing. That isn't to suggest the economy is dead, but consumers certainly aren't interacting with it on the government's terms - which means to outside investors the sovereign is dead. There are easy fixes and hard fixes. Argentina is suffering from a currency crisis the government deserves but the citizens don't - the Federal Reserve has offered direct credit swaps in the past to Brazil and Mexico (among others), and a line could help Argentina. I am still studying the effect these swaps have on the currency exchange rate, and it does appear to limit devaluation to a variable effect based on the internal economy. Argentina could benefit from the swap line in finding an easy supply to Dollars without hurting itself, but dollar liquidity isn't the cause for them. Hard fixes are fixing the internal business environment, which would require a direct combination of education (taking years to decades for full effect), guidance (national business combining localized banking initiative to address capital allocation), regulation, AND taxation. Offering low interest rates for businesses to experiment is critical in an economy, but the population is far from consumer-primed. Argentina needs guidance, Government, Central bank, and national businesses alike. Diversification of goods, advanced manufacturing capabilities, internalization of demand, regulation and enforcement protecting domestic startups along with serious pushes in education, social improvement spending, technology and process development gifts. Debt isn't an enemy, but a lack of responsible and salient business plan is. Argentinian leaders need to develop a coherent timeline of events they can reasonably do to support citizens psychologically, socially, and economically to drive localized spending to create a sustainable economy. Working with international businesses to advance manufacturing capacity at responsible wages, and creating critical developmental infrastructure step-wise. Until then, Argentina will suffer as soybean demand declines worldwide against increasing global production and decreased national diversification- a worsening emerging market crisis - and a self-destructive central bank and sovereign government. Longby DoctorFaustus2
ARS Short - Heading to ZeroSUMMARY: Short, not sure if it NDFs are available for ARS. When a meltdown occurs in the US, Argentina will go through another default potentially a new currency will be created. Shortby Tez82
ARS is completely oversold with more depreciation inboundSUMMARY: Not a good asset to HODL - risky to short as it is already oversold. Crypto is growing in LATAM. -- Technical -- Looks bad -- Fundamentals -- Even worse. Only a revolution can fix this one. Please HIT the --->>> "LIKE" and "FOLLOW" button. <<<---- *Not financial advice and is for educational purposes only. Always DYOR. SO: What do you think, have I got it right? Let me know below.Shortby Tez8662
USD/ARS: up nearly 9000% since the 1990s... Hi traders! In this video I look at: - updates on my development as a trader; - looking at exotic pairs; - comparing various exotic pairs (USD/ARS, USD/TRY, USD/MXN) to the S&P500 and US Dollar Index (DXY); - conclusions. Take care! Thanks for watching, I love you all. Francesco Long09:54by Forexistential10101
Forecast analys for Argentine pesoHyper inflation continues. On the black market price is almost double!Longby Play_hard95331
USDTRY-USDARSsimilar? important note: it is not investment advice. full respect,Longby AbdullahTuncer0
USDARS Breakout again Bullish flag brokeout recently. Expected to test higher highs. Disclaimer: Published for educational purposes.Longby sonersterUpdated 337
TA on ARS?I don't know how people do TA over this markets that always move up! I think it might stop at fib @ 76.26$by botumUpdated 441
What's next for the Argentinian Peso? What's next for the Argentinian Peso? Over the past year, the Argentinian Peso has last 20.3% against the US dollar. A combination of spiraling government debt, political unrest, and the Coronavirus have seen Argentina fall further into recession. The deprecation of the Argentinian Peso came when the government defaulted on their debt for the 9th time – three times being in this century alone. The country officially defaulted on their debt on May 22nd, when it missed a $503 Million interest payment. Argentina's President, Alberto Fernandez, said they wouldn't be able to resume payments to the IMF for another five years. Currently, Argentina has a debt burden of $323 Billion at the end of 2019, which is equivalent to 88% of the country's GDP. Alongside this, political instability and the Coronavirus have to lead the Argentinian Peso lower. There are concerns that hyperinflation will ensue in Argentina, similar to what has happened in Venezuela. Drawing lessons from Venezuela The poster child for Hyperinflation, Venezuela's fall came swift as a boom in oil prices influenced government policy. Prices from 2010-2014 were in the $100 range for Brent Crude, and Venezuela decided to fund their social systems to combat poverty and inequality. However, prices in 2015 plummeted to $50, and the Venezuelan could not pay for their social services. Furthermore, similar to how the Australia dollar is vaguely correlated to the commodities it exports, the Venezuelan Bolivar plummeted as oil exports accounted for 90% of the government's revenues. To pay for their social welfare system, the President at the time, Nicolas Madura, decided that the solution was to print more money, increasing the supply of the Bolovair in the market. It was not the solution. This caused rapid inflation in the country. In attempts to reduce this, Madura decided to make it more difficult to exchange the Bolovair into the US. However, in the Black Market, it US dollar was still being freely traded. By 2018, the exchange rate for the 1 USD was 250,000 Bolivares. But by the end of the year, the government decided to devalue the official rate to the black market rate, sending the official value of the Bolivar down 95%. Inflation reached a peak of 130,000% in 2018. Argentina, while no technically at hyperinflation, might as well have their inflation numbers be rendered useless. Currently, inflation in Argentina sits at around 53.8%. While Argentina does not have the same problem as Venezuela (dependent on a sole export), they have seen an increase in selling for the Argentinian Peso as institutional investors sell and devalue the country's bonds. Currently, the Peso is "free-floating," however, the government has imposed strict restrictions and steep taxes on officially exchanging the currency. However, just like Venezuela, there is a black market for the US dollar, which trades at a steep discount compared to the official rate. Currently, the official exchange rate is 72 Pesos for 1 USD Dollar. However, the exchange rate on the Black Market is around 120 pesos for 1 US Dollar. There may be a possibility that the Argentinian government devalues the currency, like what the Venezuelan government did. However, this was not Argentina's first rodeo with inflation. Pre 2002, the Argentine government was battling inflation problems and social and political unrest, like what is currently happening in Argentina. However, back then, a Peg was implemented to the US dollar. Once they abandoned the Peg in 2002, the value of the US dollar against the Peso skyrocketed 400%. The nation has been battling with inflation since the 1970's, where the government decided to increase the money supply by printing money, similar to Venezuela. The average inflation between 1975 and 1990 became 300%. So, we can draw similarities between what happened in Venezuela and what is currently happening to Argentina. If we see the Argentinian government devalue the currency to actual market value, we may see the USD/ARS skyrocket and inflation go rampant in Argentina. by BlackBull_Markets117
A COUNTRY almost in DEFAULT (again). Who's next?--- Please if you find this informative don't forget to give a like. Thank you! --- Just redrawing old ideas from a year ago... Nothing to redraw in fact due it seems they are going to default sooner or later for 19th time in history. You can check for yourself in the related idea just a year ago how the country situation has not improved. This is just a reflection of the symptoms that can already be felt in other countries of the world. Almost all emerging countries suffering high inflation and a continued devaluation of its currency against the dollar, this won't finish well. Other countries to watch: Turkey, Brazil, Australia... all against the dollar that would fall the last. What are your thoughts? Here please you can find a little bit of knowledge and fresh news I wanted to share with you. www.youtube.com Keep safe!by harribatuUpdated 2
Weak Peso - Strong $ and EuroIn every case in long term $ is stronger. And the country is nearly to the new default maybe. For Argentina crisis is double. Crisis from outside (World crisis) and crisis inside the country.Longby Play_hard955
Usdars en compra Target 63.420 before next correction. Chile is coming next. External debt near 200bi. Same as when UsdArs started to rocket up to 60000% Exchange. Longby DanielAnt116