notebook.fix
Registered
- Joined
- Apr 27, 2009
- Messages
- 767
- Likes
- 701
You get a gold star for your ability to see the profit between 4.30 & 5.80.
* OF COURSE Uruguayan Banks are going to try to make a profit from the badly planned currency controls....anyone can see that....but this was NOT my point. My point was...how badly thought out this K gov move turned out to be...what a fiasco. Could this be a clue for some?
Unlike before....NOW we do have a thriving black market for the US$ dollar.
Unlike before we have a run on the US dollar deposits.
Unlike before we now have a climate of fear that is fuelling an even greater capital outflow out of Argentina.
And all the while you are busy defending them, the K Gov & friends are buying Dollar$ themselves...& when THEY decide to devalue the peso...they profit...NOT YOU or me.
The real 'full story' will be to see if you are STILL defending the Ks in 6 months time.
* OF COURSE Uruguayan Banks are going to try to make a profit from the badly planned currency controls....anyone can see that....but this was NOT my point. My point was...how badly thought out this K gov move turned out to be...what a fiasco. Could this be a clue for some?
Unlike before....NOW we do have a thriving black market for the US$ dollar.
Unlike before we have a run on the US dollar deposits.
Unlike before we now have a climate of fear that is fuelling an even greater capital outflow out of Argentina.
And all the while you are busy defending them, the K Gov & friends are buying Dollar$ themselves...& when THEY decide to devalue the peso...they profit...NOT YOU or me.
The real 'full story' will be to see if you are STILL defending the Ks in 6 months time.
French jurist said:Except that the full story is this one: Uruguayan banks buy the ARG Peso at 5.80 because there's obviously a big spread between potential buyers/sellers there (lol, no Argentinean goes to Uruguay with dollars to change them to pesos, that's for sure indeed). Also it's because they don't want to take many risks keeping a big amount of pesos. That's why the UR banks asked if Argentina would buy back the pesos at the informal rate or such (no way).
Where this article obviously lies (let's be logic) is that I doubt that at 5.80, I doubt many Argentineans to cross the river to make that operation (in Buenos Aires, you can get US$ at the official rate or at the 4.60/4.70 in the worst cases. Even if you get ripped off in BA buying dollars at 5.20, what would be the point crossing the river to get 5.80??!).
There also are tensions between Arg and Ur regarding Argentineans having bank accounts in Uruguay (point to consider in this context).