La Colombia respinge i dollari - gz
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By: GZ on Lunedì 12 Novembre 2007 23:54
Il sistema finanziario globale è in crisi, ma in modo opposto al passato
La Colombia, l'India nonchè la Cina, Hong Kong, Corea, Taiwan, Thailandia, Russia impongono limiti e restrizioni ALL'ENTRATA DI CAPITALI per impedire che loro valute salgano troppo verso il dollaro !
La Colombia ! Solo 7-8 anni fa c'era il Fondo monetario e la Banca Mondiale cioè poi america e europa occidentale che prestavano soldi a questi paesi e poi non li ripagavano tipo Argentina, Ecuador, Russia e c'era Bono e gli U2 che facevano il concerto e i politici che dicevano "abbuoniamo i debiti.."
Adesso sono così pieni di capitali che le loro valute si apprezzano troppo e cercano di impedire agli stupidi gestori occidentali di portare troppo soldi
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Currency Controls Return as Central Banks Fight Gains (Update4)
By Gavin Finch and Ye Xie
Nov. 12 (Bloomberg) -- Central banks from Bogota to Mumbai are imposing foreign-exchange curbs to take control of their soaring currencies from traders dumping the dollar.
In Colombia, international investors buying stocks and bonds must leave a 40 percent deposit at Banco de la Republica for six months. The Reserve Bank of India created a bureaucratic thicket to curb speculation by foreign money managers. The Bank of Korea is investigating trading of currency forward contracts to limit gains in the won, now at a 10-year high.
Instead of using currency reserves or interest rates to influence foreign exchange markets, central banks and finance ministries are setting up obstacles to keep the falling dollar from threatening company profits and economic growth. The U.S. currency slumped 10 percent this year against its biggest trading partners, the steepest decline since 2003, while Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson has reiterated that the U.S. supports a ``strong'' dollar.
``Central banks are struggling to find new ways to intervene against their currencies and some of the proposals simply can't work,'' said Mirza Baig, an analyst in Singapore at Deutsche Bank AG, the world's biggest currency trader. Some plans are ``truly bizarre,'' he wrote in a report.