Dubai’s Default Doesn’t Worry Brazil Who Says It’s Loaded with Reserves

Dubai The president of Brazil's Central Bank (BC), Henrique Meirelles, said this Friday, November 27, that the moratorium announced by the government of Dubai for the payment of debts of the Dubai World investments fund should not worry the government and the Brazilian banks. For Meirelles, the event is an alert against the "euphoria excess".

"The euphoria excess problem happens when we think there are no more problems in the world and the first most important problem generates the opposite result," said Meirelles.

For him, troubles as that in Dubai still can occur all over the world, but they are not so worrisome, nor should they generate a collapse in the global financial system because the international banks are taking steps to tackle situations like these.

"The atmosphere today is of caution, concern. Some banks should lose funds in this institution [Dubai World], but it is not something similar to past episodes," he added.

In Brazil, however, said Meirelles, the effects should be small because the country is not "exposed to that fund or to that kind of problem". He added that the country is, moreover, "ready to confront the international market's mood oscillations. Brazil has its whole arsenal of crisis fighting measures in order, set up, ready," he stated.

According to Meirelles, the Central Bank got it right when it adopted a policy to keep accumulating reserves. "This Dubai fund episode shows the  wisdom of the BC's policies to keep accumulating reserves, showing that there are uncertainties ahead in the international market. And the fact that we have reserves is a sign of bigger strength and trust in the Brazilian economy," concluded Meirelles.

Global markets have come under pressure in recent days after Dubai on Wednesday said it would ask creditors of two flagship firms, including conglomerate Dubai World, for a standstill on debt payments as part of a restructuring.

That decision sparked concerns about the financial health of the Gulf region and worries over the potential exposure by banks around the world.

However the Brazilian real closed stronger against the dollar on Friday as concerns about the ramifications of the Dubai debt situation eased. The real ended at 1.7434 to the US dollar compared with 1.750 on Thursday.

Investors ran for cover Thursday on news that Dubai World asked for a six-month stay on debt repayments. Dubai World's liabilities total about 60 billion USD.

Markets calmed after Finance Minister Guido Mantega and Brazil's banks said there was no local exposure to the fund, while European banks said they weren't as exposed to state-run Dubai World's debt as initially believed.

ABr

Tags:

You May Also Like

To Protect Domestic Production China Bars Beef and Pork from Brazil

The Brazilian embassy in Beijing informed Brazil’s Ministry of Agriculture’s Department of International Relations that the ...

A Brazilian CD Sings Lullabies in 12 Languages

The Lebanese Marie Nabhan has been living in Brazil since 1978, but when her ...

A Decades-Long Skirmish Pitches Brazil’s Military Against Descendants of Slaves

The late Afro-Brazilian scholar Abdias do Nascimento set a unique flame to Brazil’s quilombos, ...

Brazil’s Lula: No More Mr. Humble Guy!

"We no longer accept participation in international politics as if we were the wretches ...

Brazil Needs Reforms, Says Country’s Industry Leader

The industrial sector, composed of three groups – manufacturing, construction, and mining -, which ...

Brazil in New Dehli Readying the G-20 Troops

The Brazilian Minister of Foreign Relations, Celso Amorim, arrives today in New Delhi, India, ...

Top Names in Brazilian Fashion Have Arab Blood

They grew up listening to the their parents and grandparents speaking in Arabic. At ...

Brazil’s GDP Grows 1.4% in First Quarter

Brazil’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) – the sum of all goods and services produced ...

How Muslins Found a Home and Thrived in Brazil

Those interested in the history of Arab immigration to Brazil have just been provided ...

Brazil’s Landless Resist Police and Killer Militias

A Brazilian Military Brigade, under orders from sub-commander Paul Mendes, on Tuesday, June 3, ...

WordPress database error: [Table './brazzil3_live/wp_wfHits' is marked as crashed and last (automatic?) repair failed]
SHOW FULL COLUMNS FROM `wp_wfHits`