JPM wants to flood Argentina with dolares

Johnnybags

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and wants the Chinese money swapped recently from China to Argentina? Very strange.



BUENOS AIRES (Dow Jones)--JP Morgan Chase & Co. (JPM) has formally pitched a swap proposal to the Argentine government in which it would trade U.S. dollars for Chinese yuan, the daily Clarin reported Friday.

Calls to both Argentina's Central Bank and JP Morgan seeking comment were not immediately returned.

JP Morgan reportedly made the proposal to Argentine Central Bank President Martin Redrado shortly after the monetary authority said it had signed a three-year currency swap with China totaling CNY70 billion yuan, or about $10.2 billion. Redrado said the swap is a contingency deal and will be accessed only if necessary.
 
Do you have a link?

Is this a tactical move to stop the Yuan from being an international currency or is JPMorgan trying to get rid of its dollars since they knows they will go down?
 
Google it, thats all it says

Do you have a link?

Is this a tactical move to stop the Yuan from being an international currency or is JPMorgan trying to get rid of its dollars since they knows they will go down?

My guess is they do not want China gaining a foothold in South America. Exporting inflation has been our domain. China is learning from the best exporter of debt and inflation in the business. If South America relies on the Chinese currency, its all the less we can send overseas of our bloated inventory of dollars. China is actually giving away a good deal to them. A strong currency in exchange for their fairly weak one. A cost of doing business to gain a foothold. I doubt Argentina will swap YUAN for Dollars. Its a great "introductory rate" for them from China.
 
The question: Why is JP Morgan Chase doing this $10.2 billion swap.? :rolleyes:

http://atfa.org/cgi-data/news/files/2135.shtml

The operation not only took financial operators by surprise. Also, Minister Carlos Fernandez only managed to say: "I am making no comments." When Redrado arrived at the plenary session of the assembly, a cloud of reporters followed. And by the afternoon he had to change his agenda for the requests for meetings from executives, like from Merrill Lynch, which were seeking more details about the announcement.

News Center

Accord signed with China to strengthen reserves
Clarin
March 31, 2009

It will be an open credit in yuan to use at any time, equivalent to US$10.2 billion. Among other things, it could pay for Chinese imports and not use Central Bank money. That was pressure on the dollar is cut down.

By Silvia Naishtat

President Cristina Kirchner knew about it for a week. And a team of five members of the Central Bank is negotiating it since last February. But yesterday the news came to Medellin from Beijing. The Chinese Central Bank announced that by a swap of currencies it would open an account at the Argentine Central Bank for 70 billion yuan (Chinese currency) that currently quotes equal to US$10.2 billion. This is to say, Argentina is counting on an open credit in the fourth Central Bank of the world, which it could use or not, equal to 22% of its reserves.

This is the first operation of its kind between China and a Latin American country and while Martin Redrado, head of the BCRA, said here to bankers and investors that he has a great deal of reserves at his disposal to avoid any financial stress, the story is that now he counts on even more firepower, according to the view of economist Rogelio Frigerio, who is attending this meeting of the Interamerican Development Bank in this city in Colombia.

The operation, which gives Argentina the chance to access a multi-billion dollar loan from abroad, was compared yesterday to the special lines of credit that the U.S. Department of the Treasury opened for countries like Brazil, Mexico, Turkey and Singapore, for US$30 billion to each. The function is to avoid runs on currencies in the midst of the global crisis.

"Argentina is off that list, it's almost a pariah, but with this move it sends an important signal to the market in the midst of the uncertainty that is always generated from elections," said a well-known analyst from JP Morgan that asked for anonymity.

When one asked to speak with the president of the Central Bank of China, Zhou Xiaochuan, -who also was at the IDB meeting in Medellin one was told that he had already left for London for the meeting of the Group of 20. The spokespersons for the Chinese official recommended sticking to the concise official statement.

According to sources very close to Martin Redrado, these are the main points of the operation:

Argentina has a contingent loan, but that means access to a line of credit from abroad. The Central Bank, in a symmetrical move, opens an equivalent account for its Chinese partner in pesos.

The operation is for one year at a minimum and three years maximum. And Argentina therefore has an additional reserve at its disposal equal to US$10.2 billion.

If the country decides to turn to the loan it must advise the Chinese Central Bank 72 hours in advance. And at that time the amount, the interest rate and the term for the credit must be defined.

The advantage for Argentina is to have access to a lender of last resort.

For China, which already has given such loans in Asia, it means putting a foot in the region and beginning to position the yuan as a hard currency in the world. Looking ahead, China is seeking to replace the dollar in trade and that its products pay off in its own currency.


http://www.tradingmarkets.com/.site/news/Stock%20News/2257061/
 
It is. This is why u gotta buy gold and silver.

:D already there ;)


The Argentina selection makes sense in a way. They are already disenfranchised with the collapse of thier system in 2000. They blame the IMF, banks (usual suspects)... China looks like they're not in the "inner circle" with the IMF and other cartels(?)
So, forging a relationship with another country on the "outside" would make for a strong ally..
 
This is really huge news but

most journalists have no clue what the ramifications are. China is having an introductory sale that is too good to refuse. They will gain a foothold in South America and be in a position to offer a currency with buying power insurance. They are paying for a little political influence now. I bet DC and NYC are having a tizzy over it.
 
most journalists have no clue what the ramifications are. China is having an introductory sale that is too good to refuse. They will gain a foothold in South America and be in a position to offer a currency with buying power insurance. They are paying for a little political influence now. I bet DC and NYC are having a tizzy over it.

I know. This is HUGE.

What its extrange its that I was under the impresion that USA and China were a lot more coordinated than they appear to be. This is monetary war. I imagined they had a pact and were acting coordinated. Maybe they do, but someone its not following it?
 
Yep, China made the move

I know. This is HUGE.

What its extrange its that I was under the impresion that USA and China were a lot more coordinated than they appear to be. This is monetary war. I imagined they had a pact and were acting coordinated. Maybe they do, but someone its not following it?

and JPM wants a redux. Heck, I'd take YUAN over dollars in my paycheck. They will not swap em for dollars unless there is some huge political pressure or some sort of trade deal above and beyond what already exists. Opening Salvo in who gets to export the inflation tax. China is actually doing them a favor for now.
 
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