Los Angeles Times

South American currency markets anticipate Trump

The president-elect’s domestic plans cause drops, analysts say.

- By Vincent Bevins Bevins is a special correspond­ent.

SAO PAULO, Brazil — As it became clear the day of the U.S. presidenti­al election that Donald Trump would win, currencies throughout South America began to lose value.

In Brazil, the region’s largest economy, the real has fallen more than 9% against the U.S. dollar since election day.

The currencies in the next three biggest economies — Argentina, Colombia and Chile — have dropped between 4% and 8%.

Much attention has been paid to how a Trump administra­tion could damage the economy in Mexico, where Trump has sown fears by threatenin­g to tear up the North American Free Trade Agreement and clamp down on immigratio­n. The Mexican peso has reacted in kind, dropping 11% the day after the election and an additional 1% since then.

But Trump’s presidency could pose economic challenges much farther south of the U.S. border.

Economists say the currency markets in South America are not responding to Trump’s missives on trade or immigratio­n but rather to indication­s of his domestic plans. He has pledged to implement deep tax cuts and make massive investment­s in U.S. infrastruc­ture, moves that would almost certainly increase inflation and necessitat­e raising interest rates.

Anticipati­on of that rise — along with the general uncertaint­y of how Trump will lead the world’s largest economy — is already increasing the flow of capital out of South America and other emerging markets and into the United States, said Guilherme Mello, an economist at the University of Campinas in Brazil.

The timing could hardly be worse for South America. The continent experience­d booming economic growth for the first decade of this century by exporting iron ore, soy, copper and other commoditie­s to China. But a slowdown in the Chinese economy has turned that boom into a bust.

The country hardest hit is Brazil, which is being crushed by its worst recession in a century. Even before the election, its currency had fallen 50% since 2011. Corruption scandals and the impeachmen­t of the president this year have inspired little new confidence in a turnaround.

Capital flight “poses a real problem for the current government’s plan to create some kind of recovery,” Mello said.

Argentina is expected to finish this year with negative growth and start recovering in 2017. A rise in oil prices has helped Colombia counter some of the currency decline that followed the U.S. election.

A strengthen­ing dollar is not always bad for emerging market economies. It can correct overvaluat­ion of their currencies and boost exports. But for now, the dominant sentiment is uncertaint­y over the future with Trump in power.

“Throughout Latin America, we’ll see a lot of fluctuatio­ns in economies until it’s clear what Trump is actually going to do,” said Jason Marczak, deputy director of the Adrienne Arsht Latin America Center, part of the Atlantic Council think tank in Washington. “Donald Trump is unlike any other president we’ve seen before, so it’s not clear if he will govern like he campaigned or completely differentl­y.”

Marczak said two big questions are trade and diplomatic alliances, especially in Colombia, where the U.S. has played a major role in supporting the government as it attempts to end a decades-long civil war.

In Brazil and Argentina, the government­s are led by new presidents who are right of center politicall­y and have expressed a willingnes­s to engage with the United States in ways their predecesso­rs would not.

But if Trump retreats from the region, another superpower is ready to fill the void, Marczak said: “China is right there to step in.”

 ?? Mario Tama Getty Images ?? A SHOPPER checks out the offerings in Rio de Janeiro in 2014. Brazil’s currency has fallen more than 9% against the U.S. dollar since Donald Trump was elected.
Mario Tama Getty Images A SHOPPER checks out the offerings in Rio de Janeiro in 2014. Brazil’s currency has fallen more than 9% against the U.S. dollar since Donald Trump was elected.

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