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Dollar pull effect: How a weaker currency makes you hostage to dollar

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Dollar pull effect: How a weaker currency makes you hostage to dollar

As the rupee is moving down the slope against the US dollar, this devaluation means the demand will remain high amid a limited supply making the local currency even weaker as the International Monetary Fund (IMF) has made market-based exchange rate a cornerstone of the $3billion deal signed with Pakistan.

With the market being the sole actor defining the value of Pakistan rupee, one should expect more depreciation unless there is increased inflow.

The reason is simple: those hoarding the dollar will continue manipulating the market to their advantage, forcing others to also join the buying rush to protect their savings. Hence, the vicious circle continues.

And the most alarming result of this trend in any country is that you tend to find solution in terms of dollar only – prime example of Stockholm syndrome.

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Read more: Rupee collapse is the reason behind all ills Pakistan is facing

To understand how devaluation makes the dollar stronger and reliable for the people hit hard by a combination of a declining currency and inflation, the following report by Reuters will help.

María Barro, a 65-year-old domestic worker in Buenos Aires, buys a few dollars each month with her peso salary, a hedge against Argentina’s persistent inflation now running at over 100 per cent and a steady devaluation of the little-loved local peso.

The peso currency is now in the crosshairs of the country’s dark horse presidential front-runner, libertarian radical Javier Milei, who has pledged to eventually scrap the central bank and dollarize the economy, Latin America’s third largest.

Milei – facing a tight three-way battle with traditional political candidates on the right and left ahead of an Oct. 22 vote – says savers like Barro underscore why Argentina should shed the peso.

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“I try to buy dollars, no matter how little,” said Barro, who started to buy greenbacks on parallel markets in 2022 when 2,000 pesos got her $10. Now it would get her $2.70. “Pesos go like water and every day they are worth less.”

Barro supports the idea of a dollarized economy in theory, but says she doesn’t like Milei’s aggressive style, which involves regular expletive-laced tirades against rivals and even the Pope. She is still undecided about her vote.

Read more: Argentina’s peso, Pakistan’s rupee, depreciation and IMF

Milei’s dollarization plan has sharply divided opinion: his backers argue it is the solution to inflation near 115 per cent while detractors say it an impractical idea that would sacrifice the country’s ability to set interest rates, control how much money is in circulation and serve as the lender of last resort.

“The argument for dollarization is that there is no price stability and the independence of the central bank is an illusion,” said Juan Napoli, a Senate candidate for Milei’s Liberty Advances party.

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Napoli admitted Argentina was not yet ready for full dollarization. Milei and advisers have talked about a nine-month to two-year time frame.

“It requires a great political agreement between us and also having sufficient reserves,” Napoli said. The central bank’s current net foreign currency reserves are deep in negative territory. “It will take a while; it won’t happen immediately.”

Dollarization has been tried elsewhere, usually either replacing the local currency with dollars at a set exchange rate, or intervening in the markets to ‘peg’ the local tender to the dollar. The central bank loses its monetary policy setting role, but often is kept to handle technical and administrative tasks such as reserves management and payment systems.

Argentina pegged its peso to the dollar in 1991 under the neo-liberal economic policies of President Carlos Menem and even debated full dollarization. However, it was forced to undo the peg a decade later as a major economic crisis and run on the peso sparked riots and saw the currency board collapse.

Bolivia has a dollar peg, Venezuela has a quasi-dollar driven economy, while Ecuador, El Salvador and Panama all officially use the dollar. Zimbabwe dollarized and then abandoned it, though economists estimate that 80pc of its local economy remains in dollars.

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Argentina’s $650bn economy, though, would be by far the largest dollarization experiment, were it to happen. The country is a major global exporter of soy, corn and beef, has one of the world’s largest reserves of electric battery metal lithium and huge shale gas and oil reserves in Vaca Muerta.

Many Argentines themselves are unconvinced, fearing loss of economic independence and over-reliance on the United States. Polls in recent months show more people oppose the idea, though some new surveys suggest support is rising as inflation peaks.

“I don’t know what’s the solution, but I disagree with dollarization,” said Martina Rivero, 25, who works at a baby clothes store in Buenos Aires’ trendy Palermo district.

Milei’s presidential rivals, Economy Minister Sergio Massa and conservative ex-security minister Patricia Bullrich, have both shot down the idea of dollarization as impractical.

The government also has a $44b loan programme with the IMF, which means economic policy making often comes with strings attached. Milei spoke with the IMF in August, with dollarization part of the discussion.

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While the IMF has not commented on the plan, many experts see it as a drastic move.

“To me, it is an absolute last resort,” said Olivier Blanchard, a former IMF chief economist and now an academic. “It’s very costly to give up flexibility of the exchange rate.”

Mark Sobel, a veteran US Treasury official now at the OMFIF policy think tank in the United States, said dollarization meant authorities would lose the ability to act as a lender of last resort, which would “heighten the vulnerability of the financial system.”

Instead, he said the central bank needed to stop printing money to fund the Treasury and cut its fiscal deficit.

For many, the issue is that Argentine savers’ love of the dollar is almost impossible to undo. Many were burnt when the government confiscated, froze or forcibly converted deposits in 1989 and 2002 in what is locally known as the “corralitos”.

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Trust has been hard to win back since.

A widely cited bit of official data suggests that Argentines have as much as $371bn in dollar assets, much of it outside the local financial system, reflecting decades of people putting non-peso savings out of the government’s reach, weakening the domestic economy.

“Savings now get stuffed in the mattress or at best to invest in another country. So the link between savings and investment in Argentina is broken,” said Facundo Martinez Maino, an economist who worked on Bullrich’s economic plan.

That plan supports formalizing a “bi-monetary” system the country already has informally to bring those squirreled-away dollars back into the formal financial system.

“Dollarization is a huge fantasy and it is a big campaign lie,” said Martinez Maino. “Not even the most fanatical, fervent supporter of dollarization in Argentina can argue for it seriously right now. For a simple reason. Argentina has no reserves.”

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In a recent public war of words, Milei said Bullrich’s plans were “cowardly, lukewarm, and would end in hyperinflation and bloody dollarization”.

Supporters of dollarization say it would boost the country’s risk premium – good news for long-suffering investors – and should be feasible by first converting just physical cash.

Argentina’s monetary base of cash in circulation and deposits is 6.15 trillion pesos, around $17.5bn at the official exchange, central bank data show. At widely-used parallel exchange rates, however, that’s only $8.4bn.

“It is already a principle that Argentines practice on a daily basis. They keep huge amounts of dollars in their houses,” said Riccardo Grassi at Mangart Advisors, a Switzerland-based hedge fund involved in Argentina’s huge 2020 debt restructuring.
“Dollarization is a rational idea,” said Grassi.

On the streets of downtown Buenos Aires, there are signs everywhere with dollar prices alongside those in pesos. Some things – houses or cars – are closely linked to the dollar already and expensive, while other prices are held artificially low by subsidies, including utilities, fuel pump prices and public transport.

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Some local firms already opt to pay salaries, at least in part, in dollars. Some 20pc of local bank deposits are dollarized, although that doesn’t catch greenbacks stashed outside the banking system.

Claudio Loser, a former IMF director for the Western Hemisphere, said dollarizing fully, though, would be a “terrible shock” to the economy as holders of pesos would exchange them at a very high rate, diluting savings. Wealthier people with stashed dollars would have more protection.

Back on the streets of Buenos Aires, 18-year-old student Nicolas Ventrice was in favour of dollarization and Milei, though he admitted he didn’t really understand what it involved.

“What motivates young people the most is the dollarization of the country,” he said. “(Milei) explains it more or less, though I never fully understand how he is going to do it… all that stuff is a bit confusing.”

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Weaker yen, cheaper Japan and over three million foreign tourists

Weaker yen, cheaper Japan and over three million foreign tourists

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Weaker yen, cheaper Japan and over three million foreign tourists

Japan welcomed more than three million visitors for a second straight month in April, official data showed on Wednesday, setting the stage for a potential record year for tourism.

The number of foreign visitors for business and leisure was 3.04 million last month, edging down from the monthly record of 3.08 million achieved in March, data from the Japan National Tourism Organization (JNTO) showed.

Arrivals in April were up 56pc from the prior year and 4pc higher than in 2019, before the COVID-19 pandemic shut global borders. Visitors from France, Italy, and the Middle East rose to record levels in April for any single month.

The yen’s slide to a 34-year low has made Japan a bargain destination for foreign visitors, with arrivals set to blow past the annual record of 31.9 million seen in 2019.

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Read more: Weak yen boosts tourist wallets in Japan, per head spending up 52pc when compared to 2019

While the surge in arrivals is good news for Japan’s economy, it has caused frictions with locals. Complaints of litter and illegal parking caused local officials to erect a barrier this month to block a popular photo spot of Japan’s iconic Mt Fuji.

Trail restrictions and a new 2,000 yen ($12.79) fee will go into effect for Mt Fuji climbers this summer after a rise in pollution and accidents during last year’s hiking season.

Visitors from Mainland China, Japan’s biggest tourist market before the pandemic, exceeded 500,000 in April for the first time since January 2020 but were still 27pc below the level in 2019.

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Beijing considers local government purchases of Chinese unsold homes

Beijing considers local government purchases of Chinese unsold homes

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Beijing considers local government purchases of Chinese unsold homes

China is considering a plan for local governments nationwide to buy millions of unsold homes, Bloomberg News said on Wednesday, after a meeting of leaders of the ruling Communist Party called for efforts to clear mounting housing inventory.

The State Council is gathering feedback on the preliminary plan from various provinces and government bodies, the report added, citing people familiar with the matter.

China’s blue-chip CSI 300 real estate index climbed as much as 6 per cent at one point following the report, before paring gains, while the yuan firmed.

China’s property sector has been in a deep slump for years, hit by a debt crisis among developers. Since 2022, waves of policy measures have failed to turn around the sector that represents around a fifth of the economy and remains a major drag on Chinese consumer spending and confidence.

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Banks have been reluctant to heed Beijing’s repeated nudges to bolster credit to the embattled sector given the risks of more bad loans and continued weak sales. Home sales value of top 100 developers in April slid 45pc from a year earlier, according to recent surveys published by CRIC, a major real estate information provider.

The Politburo of the Communist Party held a meeting on April 30, saying it would improve policies to clear mounting housing inventories.

Dozens of cities have offered subsidies to encourage residents to replace their old apartments with new ones, in order to sell their growing stock of new apartments and provide crucial cash-flow to ailing developers.

Local state-owned enterprises would be asked to help purchase unsold homes from distressed developers at steep discounts using loans provided by state banks, according to the report, adding that many of these homes would then be converted into affordable housing.

Officials in China are debating the plan’s details and feasibility, and it could take months for it to be finalised, if the country’s leaders decide to go ahead, the report said.

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Linan district in the eastern city of Hangzhou issued a notice on Tuesday that the local government will purchase new apartments from private developers for public rental housing.

The district, which has 650,000 residents, said the total area of the flats purchased does not exceed 10,000 square metres. The homes will be existing houses or pre-sold homes available for delivery within one year.

China’s housing ministry did not respond to Reuters request for comment.

One of the biggest drags on property demand is that cash-strapped private developers have halted construction on a large number of new homes that were pre-sold but now cannot be delivered on time. The buyers of these homes, meanwhile, are continuing to pay off their mortgages.

Estimates vary widely, but analysts agree there are tens of millions of uncompleted apartments across China after a building boom turned to bust.

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“It’s been our view that Beijing will eventually have to address concerns about homes being delivered,” economists from Nomura said in a recent research note.

“Beijing should reach into its own pockets, even with printed money from the People’s Bank of China, to support the completion of new homes that were pre-sold by developers,” noting such a move made more sense than building public housing from scratch.

Nomura expects that eventually Beijing will set up a special agency and set aside a special fund for such a rescue.

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Pakistan external financing needs estimated at $22bn, lower power tariffs proposed for industries

Pakistan external financing needs estimated at $22bn, lower power tariffs proposed for industries

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Pakistan external financing needs estimated at $22bn, lower power tariffs proposed for industries

As talks are progress between the visiting International Monetary Fund (IMF) mission and Pakistan, the government economic team has given an initial estimate of external financing of around $22 billion, sources say.

At the same time, Islamabad has shared a power tariff rationalisation plan for industrial sector with the IMF, meant to boost much-needed domestic production and exports by giving a package to the related industries.

When it comes to external financing, issuance of sukuk bonds worth $1.5bn during the next fiscal year 2024-25 is part of the plan.

On the other hand, Pakistan is also hopeful of friendly nations extending loan rollover of around $12bn, the sources say, as the cash-starved country badly needs external financing to meet its financial obligations.

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Read more: Talks start to secure IMF programme, agreement reached on budget targets

Pakistan requires to ensure debt repayments as per schedule which includes not only the principal amount but also interest payments.

At the same time, the bonds issued by Pakistan repeatedly during the past years have been attractive only because of the high interest rates, which thus worsens the debt repayments challenge for the country.

PAKISTAN PANDA BONDS

Meanwhile, panda bonds – which are denominated in Chinese yuan but issued by foreign borrowers, including companies, multilateral agencies and governments – are also part of this plan.

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Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb had stated earlier in March that Pakistan was keen to tap Chinese investors by selling as much as $300 million in panda bonds for the first time ever.

He had told Bloomberg in an interview that selling yuan-denominated debt would allow Pakistan to diversify its funding sources and reach investors in a new market. “It’s something “we should have looked at quite frankly some time back.”

China has the second-largest and deepest bond market in the world and “it is the right thing to do” for Pakistan to tap that market, given Pakistan has already sold dollar and Eurobonds, Aurangzeb said.

According to the sources, the Pakistani authorities are confident that there will be an over $2bn inflow during the current fiscal year before June-end, while financial assistance from the World Bank and the Asian Development Bank (ADB) is also expected in 2024-25.

BOOSTING PAKISTAN EXPORTS

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Through the planned tariff rationalisation, the government wants to offer a package to the industrial sector to increase domestic production required to boost exports of Pakistani products by making the same competitive in international markets.

Read more: Power basic tariff hike is one of the IMF demands

Rising costs of doing businesses – an obvious result of high interest rates and energy prices – has crippled the economy and made the goal of increasing exports impossible.

In this connection, the sources say different proposals are being drafted for industrial power tariff cuts meant to boost the export-oriented industries.

The industrial sector, the sources added, have to make additional payments for providing subsidy to the domestic electricity consumers.

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With estimated cost of Rs100bn to be incurred in 2024-25, the plan will be included the next budget document after its approval by Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif – a move that can increase exports by $2bn to $3bn. 

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