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Bacchus4.0

(6,837 posts)
Wed Nov 27, 2013, 03:51 PM Nov 2013

Buying Into a Bubble: The Black Market Dollar in Venezuela

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/mark-weisbrot/buying-into-a-bubble-the_b_4268968.html

More from economic genius Mark Weisbrot. Apparently, the black market exchange rate has reached its max and those who buy dollars at black market prices are in for a shock when the bubble bursts, and it will be the dollar that loses value compared to the bolivar.


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Now let's look at a contemporary asset bubble: in Venezuela, there is a bubble in the black market for dollars, which according to available information has now reached as much as 59 Bolívares Fuertes (Bfs) per dollar, up from 18 in January. The official exchange rate is 6.3 (Bfs), and there is another exchange rate determined at government auctions which is reportedly around 12 (Bfs).

Why has the black market rate price of the dollar recently risen so fast? The main reason is that people expect it to continue rising, just as Americans expected house prices to keep going up in the U.S. in 2006. But there is no credible reason for this to happen. It is true that inflation has risen over the past year, but the increase has not been accelerating or even consistent. It peaked in May at 6.1 percent for the month, then fell to 3 percent by August; it has since rebounded to 4.4 percent for September and 5.1 percent for October, but clearly this is not a hyperinflation scenario.

The government says it has no plans to devalue, but even if it were to let the currency float completely freely against the dollar, it would never settle at anything approaching the black market rate. So a Venezuelan who is buying dollars on the black market now because they think it is a store of value, or a hedge against inflation, is buying into a bubble. It is like buying into the NASDAQ in the U.S. when it was at 5050 in March 2000. (It later fell to 1140 in October 2002 and is currently at 3860 more than 10 years later.)

Of course, all bubbles produce popular rationales for buying. Remember the "new economy" in the U.S. that was used to justify prices that had no relation to reality in the stock market? In Venezuela, many people think they are making a one-way bet that they cannot lose when they buy dollars. They will be surprised when the bubble bursts.

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Buying Into a Bubble: The Black Market Dollar in Venezuela (Original Post) Bacchus4.0 Nov 2013 OP
Well he might be right Paolo123 Nov 2013 #1
 

Paolo123

(297 posts)
1. Well he might be right
Wed Nov 27, 2013, 05:53 PM
Nov 2013

There is no question that the fair value of the Bolivar is lower than the official rate, but there is really no way any of us know if that value is 10,20,30,40, or 50 to 1. It might very well be 20 and will eventually revert there.

For those of you in Venezuela I (for recreation) am an ocean sailor. Does anyone know if I came to Venezuela with 10 - 15K USD if I could exchange it for a boat that is worth 50 times that in the US and sail it to the US and sell it?

This is what used to go on in South Africa during apartheid. They wealthy couldn't get their assets out so suddenly South Africa developed a ship-building industry with costs in Rand and the owners would sail them to Europe and sell them for the local currency there.

I've been wanting to try to pull that off in Venezuela.

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