Brazil, Mexico, Peru, Colombia, Korea, Taiwan, South Africa, Russia and even Poland are either intervening directly in the exchange markets to prevent their currencies rising too far, or examining what options they have to stem disruptive inflows.Read the rest here.
Peter Attard Montalto from Nomura said quantitative easing by the US Federal Reserve and other central banks is incubating serious conflict. "It is forcing money into emerging market bond funds, and to a lesser extent equity funds. There has truly been a wall of money entering many countries," he said.
"I worry that we are on the cusp of a competitive race to the bottom as country after country feels they need to keep up."
Brazil's finance minister Guido Mantega has complained repeatedly over the past month that his country is facing a "currency war" as funds flood the local bond market to take advantage of yields of 11pc, vastly higher than anything on offer in the West.
"We're in the midst of an international currency war. This threatens us because it takes away our competitiveness. Advanced countries are seeking to devalue their currencies," he said, pointing the finger at America, Europe and Japan. He is mulling moves to tax short-term debt investments.
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Thursday, September 30, 2010
Currency "war" is escalating
I have said many many times, we are in the early stages of a major currency crisis that will affect the entire developed world. It is being fueled by out of control levels of sovereign debt coupled with central bankers gone wild with their printing presses in a mad effort to debase their currencies. And the effects (inflation) will not be limited to the United States. The world is drowning in an ocean of paper money.
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