Jamaica Gleaner

Currency tumbles as Venezuelan­s look to unload bolivars

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A STAGGERING plunge in the free-market value of Venezuelan currency sent people scrambling to sell off their depreciati­ng bolivars Friday.

DolarToday, a widely followed website that tracks exchanges made near the Colombian border, reported that the bolivar had lost a quarter of its value over the last seven days.

Everyone i n smartphone­obsessed Caracas seemed to learn of the crash at the same time as the DolarToday app, a ubiquitous tool in the South American country, sent out a series of messages announcing the new rates under the headline “hyperinfla­tion!”

Venezuelan currency was trading at around 420 bolivars per dollar Friday afternoon, according to the site. That was down from 300 bolivars per dollar on May 14 and 173 at the start of the year.

Many black market dealers paused transactio­ns until the rate stabilised, but some Venezuelan­s said they had changed money at the 400 bolivar rate Friday.

It was not immediatel­y clear what prompted the sudden drop, though a Barclay Capital Inc report issued Friday pointed to government expansion of the money supply as an underlying cause.

Barclays projected the Bolivar could dip as low as 600 to the dollar this year.

“We do not see any signal of change from the authoritie­s but these risks should make them reconsider their policies,” the report said.

The administra­tion of President Nicolas Maduro keeps tight control over the legal exchange of bolivars, using a byzantine three-tier system. The system is meant to subsidise crucial imports, but also has led to widespread corruption and speculatio­n.

LIMITED SUPPLY

One official rate is 6.3 bolivars per dollar. The weakest official rate, which was billed as an alternativ­e to illegal currency exchanges when it was rolled out earlier their year, has inched up to 200 bolivars per dollar. The fact many people are willing to pay double that on the black market i ndicates t he supply of dollars is limited.

The Maduro administra­tion has been hoarding dollars as it grapples with falling oil prices. That has contribute­d to shortages and other economic distortion­s.

DolarToday is openly hostile to the socialist government and frequently picks up articles attacking the administra­tion. But the site insists its exchangera­te reports are based on actual trades at the border and are not manipulate­d to undercut the government.

In April, Maduro repeated his assertion that the site’s shadowy managers, whose identities are not public, are collaborat­ing with the speculator­s and opposition leaders he blames for the country’s problems. He accused them of purposely sowing chaos and promised to have them arrested.

“We’re going to put those people at DolarToday who are waging an economic war against Venezuela behind bars sooner rather than later” he said.

The site, which is sometimes blocked within Venezuela, responded with a cheeky video documentin­g its popularity set to the club hit Turn Down for What.

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 ?? AP ?? This January 4, 2008 file photo shows bank workers handling Venezuela’s currency, the “Bolivar Fuerte” or Strong Bolivar, at the Central Bank in Caracas, Venezuela. Venezuelan­s are expressing disbelief as the country’s currency has lost a quarter of...
AP This January 4, 2008 file photo shows bank workers handling Venezuela’s currency, the “Bolivar Fuerte” or Strong Bolivar, at the Central Bank in Caracas, Venezuela. Venezuelan­s are expressing disbelief as the country’s currency has lost a quarter of...

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