Showing posts with label macroeconomics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label macroeconomics. Show all posts

Monday, July 15, 2013

Where is a BMW like Bitcoin?...In Argentina

While this isn't exactly recent news, in May Bloomberg ran an article about the economic effects of the rampant devaluation of the Argentinian peso, and how Argentinians are buying more and more luxury cars such as BMWs, Mini-Coopers, and Land Rovers as stores of value and hedges against inflation. Definitely gives a different perspective to car ownership!


    BMW                       =                    BITCOIN?

I was fascinated when I read this for the first time a few weeks ago, so I thought I'd share it here on my blog:
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BMWs Gaining Bitcoin-Like Appeal as CPI Hedge: Argentina Credit
By Camila Russo and Eliana Raszewski - May 14, 2013

Argentines are buying more BMWs, Jaguars and other luxury cars as a store of value as inflation decimates their deposits and pummels the nation’s bonds.

Purchases of cars from Germany’s Bayerische Motoren Werke AG (BMW) and Jaguar Land Rover Automotive Plc, owned by India’s Tata Motors Ltd. (TTMT), jumped the most in April among brands sold in Argentina. The sales were part of a 30 percent surge in car sales from a year earlier that was the biggest increase in 20 months, according to the Argentine Car Producers Association. While used-car prices rose in line with inflation last year, or about 25 percent, peso bonds tied to consumer prices fell 13 percent. The drop was the biggest in emerging markets.

Car sales in Argentina increased by the most in almost two years last month as a ban on buying dollars made Argentines turn to vehicles to protect savings against the fastest inflation in the Western Hemisphere after Venezuela. Luxury models are becoming more attractive because they are imported at the official dollar rate, said Gonzalo Dalmasso, vehicle industry analyst at Buenos Aires research company Abeceb.com. Argentines with savings in dollars are able to purchase cars at half the cost by trading in the unofficial currency market.

“I’m seeing a lot of people buying high-end cars for the first time, trading Minis for middle of the market models,” Ignacio Monteserin, a salesman at BMW’s Mini Cooper dealership in Buenos Aires’s Libertador Avenue, said. “It’s become very convenient to own luxury cars in general because of the big gap in the exchange rates and you get to have a quality good that will preserve the value of your money with time.”

Surging Sales

Car sales in Argentina surged 30 percent in April from a year earlier to 88,323 units, the fastest increase since August 2011 and the second-highest on record, according to a car association known as Adefa.

Argentines have bought 1,588 BMWs so far this year, more than double the amount they purchased in the same period last year, according to Argentina’s Car Dealers Association, or Acara. Jaguar and Land Rover sales increased by 200 percent and 278 percent respectively, the data show.

Mini Cooper sales rose 54 percent in January to April from a year earlier. A Mini Coupe costs 194,000 pesos, or $37,072 at the official rate of 5.2380 per dollar. It costs $19,400 at the parallel rate at 10 pesos per dollar, cutting the price in half for Argentines who have savings in dollars and go to the black market to sell them for pesos. The same model in the U.S. costs $22,150.

Bitcoin, Gold

Argentines are buying cars, gold and even virtual currency such as bitcoin as they look for ways to preserve their savings as the peso is forecast to fall 17 percent this year.

The peso in the illegal currency market, known as the blue market locally, weakened to a record 10.45 pesos per dollar last week. This means Argentines with peso salaries who buy dollars in the black market to protect against a weakening of the local currency and 25 percent inflation lose about half of their money.

Inflation-linked bonds don’t protect against rising prices because they’re tied to the official price index, which at 10.6 percent is less than half the estimates of independent economists. They have dropped 3.4 percent this year after losing 13 percent in 2012.

Argentina’s official price index has been questioned by economists since 2007, when then-President Nestor Kirchner changed staff at the National Statistics Institute. The International Monetary Fund in February censured the country for not improving its inflation measurement.

Bond Losses

Argentina’s dollar-denominated bonds aren’t a better alternative as a U.S. legal dispute on repayment of the nation’s defaulted debt caused average yields to soar to 13.92 percent, almost three times the average in emerging markets, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co.

The notes have plunged 10 percent his year.

The rate banks pay for 30-day deposits of more than 1 million pesos was 15.38 percent on May 10.

“The government takes away their salaries and deposits through inflation and negative interest rates,” said Jorge Remes Lenicov, a former Economy Minister from January 2002 to April 2002, when the country abandoned a decade-long peso peg to the dollar.

The extra yield investors demand to hold Argentine government dollar bonds instead of U.S. Treasuries narrowed 20 basis points to 1,171 basis points at 1:27 p.m. in Buenos Airs, according to JPMorgan’s EMBI Global index.

Default Swaps

The cost to insure Argentine debt against default within the next five years through credit default swaps rose 107 basis points to 2,770 basis points, according to data compiled by CMA Ltd.

While inflation and a gap in the exchange rates is fueling sales, the same reasons are also deterring investment in the car industry, said Cristiano Rattazzi, President of Fiat Auto Argentina SA.

“There are no certainties,” Rattazzi, who is also head of the car makers association, said in a phone interview in Buenos Aires. “It’s a very unstable environment. What if they devalue? What if there are multiple exchange rates? All of these questions and high inflation are putting a big break on investment.”

The Argentine government in March 2011 ordered car importers to match their imports with exports or investment of equal value to boost the trade surplus.

‘Enjoy It’

The decree prompted BMW to export rice and Porsche Automobil Holding SE to begin exporting olives and Malbec red wine. Shizuoka Subaru Motor Co. agreed to export chicken feed, Hyundai Motor Co. began sending soy flour to Vietnam and Mitsubishi Motors Corp. (7211) started shipping peanuts.

As Argentines continue to lose purchasing power, cars and other durable goods are temporary solutions to the region’s fastest inflation after Venezuela, said Lenicov.

“There’s nowhere to put your money in,” Lenicov said. “The reasoning is you lose money almost anywhere because of inflation, so if you buy a car, at least you get to enjoy it.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Camila Russo in Buenos Aires at crusso15@bloomberg.net; Eliana Raszewski in Buenos Aires at eraszewski@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: David Papadopoulos at papadopoulos@bloomberg.net; Michael Tsang at mtsang1@bloomberg.net

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Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Goldman Sachs to Overhaul Russian Business Image

Russia, despite all of the improvements that have taken place since the collapse of communism, is not exactly considered an outstanding place to do business. Growing socio-political unrest, excessive government involvement in the markets, and an economic over-reliance on commodities--particularly oil--have caused international investors to be wary. On a broader scale, slowing growth and disappointing performances by all of the BRICS countries have led to deflated expectations for emerging markets in general. All of these financial and economic trends have been combined with an overwhelmingly negative perception of Russian international relations, especially Putin's continued support for Bashar-al-Assad's regime in the Syrian civil war, and the recent fiasco surrounding alleged CIA spy Ryan Fogle, who was outed by the Russian FSB (Федеральная служба безопасности Российской Федерации, successor to the KGB).

Image from Bloomberg.


Yet many Russians have continually insisted that perceptions of the Russian business environment do not reflect reality. German Gref, current head of Sberbank, Russia's largest bank, responded to a recent international business ranking that placed Russia behind Albania by stating, “We have to improve our image because we are really better than what people think of us.” (Video and full text of his comments available here in Russian; I have yet to translate all of it myself).

Enter Wall Street--more specifically, Goldman Sachs, arguably the leading American investment bank. Earlier this spring, it was announced that Goldman Sachs has been tasked with improving Russia's international business image. According to The Wild East, Goldman has been hired by a special working group formed by the Ministry for Economic Development, and composed of Sberbank, VTB, and, most importantly, the Russia Direct Investment Fund--headed by Kyrill Dmitriev, a former Goldman Sachs man.

The re-entry of Goldman Sachs into the Russian market is an important international move for the firm, considering they left Russia twice during the 1990s and only returned in 2006. While many Western firms have left Russia indefinitely due to the uncompetitive and government-dominated banking environment there, Goldman has been able to grow profits at its Moscow operation and remain an active player in the deal-making and advisory scene. Goldman Sachs assisted Russian giant VTB with its 2011 secondary debt placement of $5.2 billion, and has advised on the listing for Russia's national MICEX exchange.

One of the biggest challenges Goldman will face moving forward is how to help Russia in its efforts to improve its current credit rating of BBB, the second-lowest investment grade. Goldman certainly has the firepower and clout to make an impact, but it will have to contend not only with the specific challenges facing Russia's national economy, but also with the broader economic currents outlined above. Goldman has also already been attacked by some activist groups such as Human Rights Foundation, which has argued the bank shouldn't work for Russia due to the country's alleged human rights abuses. However, given Goldman's signature resilience and continued rebound following the 2007-2008 American financial crisis--and the current dearth of Western bulge-bracket finance in Russia--expanding its international involvement and deepening its presence in the "Wild East" of Russia might prove a very profitable move.

Image from Fox Business.