Brazil Injects Close to US$ 3 Billion in Economy to Halt Rising Dollar

100 dollar bills The Brazilian Central Bank announced on Thursday, October 16, further measures to ensure liquidity and support the real, Brazil's currency, the real. The bank expanded the list of securities it will accept to free up reserve requirements on term deposits and took new measures to ensure that banks that borrow from its discount window provide credit lines to exporters

The real closed up 0.2% at 2.16 per dollar after the central bank sold one billion in dollar repurchase agreements and sold 1.814 billion of 2.5 billion in dollar swap contracts on offer in an auction on Thursday.

The Bovespa stock market index ended trading on Thursday down 1.06% at 36,441.72 points after slumping 7%. Bovespa followed the Wall Street 4.6% rally as investors snapped up beaten-down shares following on the worst day since the 1987 stock market crash.

Shares of government managed Petrobras oil company sank 7.5% and mining company Vale do Rio Doce, which is taking a hit from a sharp decline in industrial metals prices, fell 2.1%.

Meanwhile Latin America's second largest economy. Mexico. stepped up intervention in the foreign-exchange market, helping the peso post gains, an hour after central bank Governor Guillermo Ortiz said policy makers were looking to pare back their purchases of the currency.

Banco de Mexico bought 1.9 billion US dollars worth of pesos, up from 400 million on Wednesday. The bank has now purchased 11.2 billion US dollars worth of pesos, depleting its near-record foreign reserves, since the currency tumbled to a record low last week amid the worst global credit crisis since the Great Depression.

The peso finally rose 2.4% to 12.8343 per dollar after having plunged as much as 4.2% before the central bank stepped into the market. The currency has dropped 23% since it reached a six-year high last August as the financial crisis prompted investors to pull money out of higher-yielding, developing-nation assets.

Banco de Mexico may stop using its foreign reserves to prop up the peso soon, Ortiz said in an interview on Televisa network Thursday. He said new peso purchases wouldn't be as large as last week's interventions.

The bank bought 6.4 billion US dollars worth of pesos on October 10 alone. It said on October 14 that reserves had fallen to a one-year low of 75 billion. Reserves stood at a record 86.9 billion US dollars on July 18, up 52% from three years earlier boosted by exports of oil.

Mercopress

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil’s Key Role in Globalization

“Today, Brazil is prepared to assume an important leadership role for all of the ...

One Word for Brazil: Globalization

My subject is trade policy in Latin America, and the potential gains from greater ...

It’s Tough to Be South American and Brazil Knows It

It’s probable that the political and economic integration of South America will still be ...

Brazil’s Corruption Scandal Has Spared Lula for Now, But Government Is Paralyzed

The corruption scandal engulfing Brazil is beginning to have effects on the economy and ...

Gearing up for Elections in Brazil

The October elections in Brazil will be the first real test of President Luiz ...

WTO Meeting Will Fail If Europe Can’t Do Better, Says Brazil

The Brazilian Minister of Foreign Relations, Celso Amorim, believes that the determination of a ...

For Brazil’s Shoe Maker Pampili There Is No Crisis

Through work and promotion strategy of its brand, to make it strong and respected, ...

UN Sees Crime Rising in Brazil

The “State of the World’s Cities, 2004/2005” report, issued yesterday in Barcelona by the ...

Brazilian NBA Star Shines Back Home

Brazilian-born Nenê, a basketball star in the U.S., went to Brazil for an NBA-sponsored ...

Russia’s Sale of Air Defense System to Brazil Complicates Any US Fighter Deal

According to a report on the Sunday edition of daily Correio Braziliense, the possible ...