The Korea Times

Crypto crash leaves El Salvador with no easy exit from worsening crisis

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SAN SALVADOR (Reuters) — El Salvador’s big bet on bitcoin, which the Central American nation has been buying since September, has soured in recent weeks as a cryptocurr­ency rout shaved over a third of the value of the government’s holdings, Reuters calculatio­ns show.

Under populist President Nayib Bukele, a vocal cheerleade­r for the currency, El Salvador went all-in on bitcoin, not just becoming the world’s first country to adopt it as a legal tender but also sketching out plans for a volcano-powered crypto mining hub and plans to issue the first sovereign bond linked to the coin.

With global borrowing costs on the rise and a big debt repayment on the horizon, El Salvador has other fiscal headaches than the impact of the currency’s swoon. But the crypto slump has also closed some potential off-ramps from the crisis, including the now-postponed bitcoin bond.

“The government’s financial problems are not because of bitcoin, but they have gotten worse because of bitcoin,” said Ricardo Castaneda, senior economist and country coordinato­r for El Salvador and Honduras at think tank Central American Institute for Fiscal Studies (ICEFI). For the government, he said, “bitcoin ceased to be a solution and has become part of the problem.”

Bitcoin has fallen 45 percent since El Salvador officially adopted it in early September, and 26 percent from its May high as crypto assets have been swept up in a risk-off investing environmen­t.

The combined market value of all cryptocurr­encies recently fell to $1.2 trillion, less than half of where it was last November, based on data from CoinMarket­Cap.

El Salvador’s debt stood at $24.4 billion as of December, from $19.8 billion at end-2019, after the Bukele administra­tion allocated millions of dollars to deal with the COVID-19 pandemic and its economic effects over the past couple of years.

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund estimates that the current account deficit for its remittance and external financing-reliant economy will hover near $2 billion through 2025.

But adopting bitcoin set the country at loggerhead­s with multilater­al lenders like the IMF, from which Finance Minister Alejandro Zelaya said last year the government was seeking $1.3 billion.

The fund has recommende­d that El Salvador ditch bitcoin altogether. Any deal for a credit line would have to address risks including “those related to the adoption of bitcoin as legal tender as well as risks related to economic governance,” an IMF official said on Wednesday.

Ratings agencies have warned bitcoin adoption could facilitate money laundering, and importantl­y, the bitcoin risk has given bond investors another reason to demand higher returns

As of Wednesday, they were seeking a record-high premium of 2,445 basis points over U.S. Treasuries.

Bukele’s moves to centralize power, from removing all the top judges on the country’s supreme court to muscling through authorizat­ion to seek immediate re-election despite constituti­onal term limits, have helped drive the risk premium higher.

“If there isn’t potential for bitcoin-growth dividends or innovative bitcoin-financing, then the Bukele administra­tion will have to prioritize spending priorities and identify financing options,” according to Siobhan Morden, head of Latin

America Fixed Income Strategy at Amherst Pierpont.

Reuters calculatio­ns of a $36 million paper loss in bitcoin, enough to

make at least some of those coupon payments, is based on Bukele’s tweets and an estimate of prices on the purchase dates.

 ?? Reuters-Yonhap ?? A sign reads “Bitcoin accepted here” outside a coffee shop where the cryptocurr­ency is accepted as a payment method in San Salvador in this May 15 file photo.
Reuters-Yonhap A sign reads “Bitcoin accepted here” outside a coffee shop where the cryptocurr­ency is accepted as a payment method in San Salvador in this May 15 file photo.

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