海角大神

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Argentina plays fast and loose with inflation facts

Argentina's hard-charging president Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner has instituted new policies that place stringent controls on foreign-currency purchases, while insisting citizens convert their US dollars to pesos. The Daily Reckoning team is skeptical.

By Bill Bonner, Guest blogger

Spain was down again before we noticed it was up. Monday morning, stocks all over the world were rising on hopes of a solution to the euro problem. By afternoon, the rally was over. The Dow ended the day down 142 points.

But that鈥檚 the way the euro rescues go. The effects are more and more short-lived. Pretty soon, investors will realize they don鈥檛 work at all鈥nd then there won鈥檛 be any up-surge, A new rescue plan will be announced. Investors will realize it is just another scammy fix. And stocks will go down.

When that happens the game will be over.

We might not be far from that point now.

Meanwhile, the US is worried too. About Europe, which is on the verge of total breakdown? Maybe. About China, which is growing at its slowest pace in 13 years? Maybe.

About the US itself鈥here the 鈥榬ecovery鈥 went missing? Almost certainly.

Here at our Daily Reckoning headquarters, we remain sans soucis. Which is another way of saying, we鈥檙e enjoying the show. What will the fixers do next, we wonder? Every fix makes things worse. But they keep at it.

For the benefit of Dear Readers with skin in the game, we leave our 鈥淐rash Alert鈥 flag up for a few more days. This market could go to hell in a hurry. If you鈥檝e got skin in the game, get it out.

And, for the benefit of everyone, we cast our weary eyes down to the pampas. Is there any policy so foolish the Argentines have not had a go at it? Is there any financial disaster so catastrophic the gauchos haven鈥檛 repeated it at least two or three times? Is there any trick so dishonest or so transparently fraudulent that the politicians south of the Rio de la Plata don鈥檛 make a regular habit of it?

Our Bonner Family Office chief investment strategist, Rob Marstrand, who makes his home in Buenos Aires, is visiting us in the US this week. He tells us that it is said to be a crime in Argentina to mention the 鈥減arallel鈥 market in dollars. On the official market, the peso still trades at about 4.4 to the dollar. On the unofficial exchanges, that is, on the parallel market, the 鈥渂lue鈥 peso trades at less than 5.1 to the greenback.

But it鈥檚 apparently illegal to mention it.

So is it supposedly illegal to publish the real inflation rate. The Argentine feds have their rate; it鈥檚 a crime to contradict them.

The government is also trying to get Argentines to stop using the dollar as a protection against peso inflation. The president says she is converting her own dollar deposits to pesos, to set an example.

鈥淚 guarantee you she is not converting her accounts in Switzerland,鈥 says Rob.

But the typical Argentine wasn鈥檛 born yesterday. He鈥檚 been around the block a few times. He knows that when the government gets in financial trouble, it can鈥檛 be trusted. He knows that it will seize whatever money it can get its hands on 鈥 especially if it is foreign currency. So, if he鈥檚 saved dollars, he鈥檚 hiding them鈥r getting them out of the country. Here鈥檚 the Reuters report:

Why would they be jittery? Because their dollar deposits were seized and forcibly converted to pesos 10 years ago? Because the peso was devalued by 66% in the last crisis?

Or because the Argentine peso of 50 years ago has been devalued by approximately 42 trillion percent. We don鈥檛 know how such a thing is mathematically possible鈥ut that鈥檚 the report we鈥檝e read.

Defaults, devaluations, hyperinflations 鈥 the Argentines have seen it all.

Americans have a lot to learn.

And another thought鈥

The British writer AA Gill once noted that鈥

Bill Bonner
听蹿辞谤 The Daily Reckoning