LuckyLuke
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- May 17, 2024
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Howdy folks,
I've been curious about the economics of buying vs building a home, which varies greatly depending on the costs and, for those of us earning in dollars, can in turn vary greatly on the brecha cambiaria.
The debate of these two options reminds me a lot of the debate between buying a US house when prices are higher (but mortgage rates are lower), or buying when the price is lower (but mortgage rates are higher) with the plan of eventually refinancing. Both involve risk, intuition and occasional failure.
Now, many argentines I know closely still wholly put their faith in the USD and will happily tell me to sit tight and wait for the brecha to return (while they invest in Plazo Fijo instead).
So the great question is how long is a wait? The question, gnawing at the back of so many of our minds, brings me to the following chart:
Now this is a very curious chart for the inexperienced new arrival (such as a myself) because it shows that the brecha really is a temporary distortion in an otherwise pretty stable market. Milei has reduced the brecha to 35-45% and it's expected, once the Cepo is lifted, that the great "unification of the rates" will bring it to zero. All will be great and the IMF's tears of joy will water the drought parched fields of this country.
THIS BRINGS US TO THE GREAT GAMBLE!
Questions, ladies & gentlemen:
1) Is the current brecha as good as it will get during the administration of Milei? E.g. we can expect at worst, with the lifitng of the Cepo that the brecha will go to zero? Or do you see Milei running out of resources to stimulate pesos (the dreaded drought returning perhaps? YPF embargo? Milei buying a hundred more warplanes?).
2) Do you expect, much like the swings in US politics, that a peronista administration will follow Milei and with it the wacky cowboy days of fiscal insanity and plundering of foreign reserve with wanton abandon? Or could a relatively benign government follow that changes very little of the cepo or brecha?
3) Would you stash your squirrel nuts, sit on your hands (renting) and wait for such a brecha before building, knowing that it would need to last the 3-5 years required to build a home down here? Or would you build or buy anyway and to hell with timing the dollar market altogether?
Opinions and armchair prognostications please!
I've been curious about the economics of buying vs building a home, which varies greatly depending on the costs and, for those of us earning in dollars, can in turn vary greatly on the brecha cambiaria.
The debate of these two options reminds me a lot of the debate between buying a US house when prices are higher (but mortgage rates are lower), or buying when the price is lower (but mortgage rates are higher) with the plan of eventually refinancing. Both involve risk, intuition and occasional failure.
Now, many argentines I know closely still wholly put their faith in the USD and will happily tell me to sit tight and wait for the brecha to return (while they invest in Plazo Fijo instead).
So the great question is how long is a wait? The question, gnawing at the back of so many of our minds, brings me to the following chart:
Now this is a very curious chart for the inexperienced new arrival (such as a myself) because it shows that the brecha really is a temporary distortion in an otherwise pretty stable market. Milei has reduced the brecha to 35-45% and it's expected, once the Cepo is lifted, that the great "unification of the rates" will bring it to zero. All will be great and the IMF's tears of joy will water the drought parched fields of this country.
THIS BRINGS US TO THE GREAT GAMBLE!
Questions, ladies & gentlemen:
1) Is the current brecha as good as it will get during the administration of Milei? E.g. we can expect at worst, with the lifitng of the Cepo that the brecha will go to zero? Or do you see Milei running out of resources to stimulate pesos (the dreaded drought returning perhaps? YPF embargo? Milei buying a hundred more warplanes?).
2) Do you expect, much like the swings in US politics, that a peronista administration will follow Milei and with it the wacky cowboy days of fiscal insanity and plundering of foreign reserve with wanton abandon? Or could a relatively benign government follow that changes very little of the cepo or brecha?
3) Would you stash your squirrel nuts, sit on your hands (renting) and wait for such a brecha before building, knowing that it would need to last the 3-5 years required to build a home down here? Or would you build or buy anyway and to hell with timing the dollar market altogether?
Opinions and armchair prognostications please!