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Argentina Is Getting Exactly What It Deserves
Bi ^ | 7-3-2014 | Linette Lopez

Posted on 07/03/2014 9:41:28 AM PDT by blam

Linette Lopez
July 3, 2014

Argentina has its back against a wall. On July 30 it may default on a sovereign-debt payment that could send its economy into a tailspin of rising interest rates, money printing, and inflation.

It could be the worst economic tragedy the republic has seen since 2001.

And the tragedy will be well deserved, because this is a drama of Argentina's own making, a figment of political imagination tied closely with its history and culture. In Argentina, debt is identity, and this specific over-$1.3 billion debt in question, purchased by a group of hedge fund managers back in 2001, has hit a nerve.

Here's what former finance minister Hernan Lorenzino said about it in 2012:

"The state has the capacity to make these payments. We have the funds available to make these payments. But fundamentally, we have the political will to continue paying as we have paid. The possibility of default does not exist in Argentina ... (The rating agencies) pretend to install the idea that something is going to fail as they have been unsuccessfully for years. They will not accomplish this."

For over a decade the country has refused to pay a group of hedge fund managers led by Elliott Management's Paul Singer. This group, known as NML, refused to take a massive haircut on Argentine sovereign debt purchased after the country's last crash. Argentina, in turn, refused to pay them 100 cents on the dollar and fought to continue doing so all the way to the Supreme Court. It lost.

(snip)

(Excerpt) Read more at businessinsider.com ...


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: argentina; bankruptcy; debt; default
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1 posted on 07/03/2014 9:41:29 AM PDT by blam
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To: blam

It works until you run out of other people’s money.


2 posted on 07/03/2014 9:46:20 AM PDT by 17th Miss Regt
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To: blam
... Is Getting Exactly What It Deserves

The US turn is coming...


3 posted on 07/03/2014 9:48:57 AM PDT by C210N (When people fear government there is tyranny; when government fears people there is liberty)
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To: blam

Witness the death throes of the Welfare State.

First, you spend and tax. When you can’t raise taxes anymore on “the rich,” you borrow and spend. When the suckers who loaned you the money ask to be repaid, tell them you aren’t going to repay them and scream about being raped by the international finance system. Repeat this process until the last idiot finally stops lending you money. Then the mob violence, civil war and killings begin.


4 posted on 07/03/2014 9:50:50 AM PDT by Opinionated Blowhard ("When the people find they can vote themselves money, that will herald the end of the republic.")
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To: blam

In 1900, Argentina was one the top 10 richest countries in the world and a favorite destination for ambitious immigrants. Then the Peronists took charge.


5 posted on 07/03/2014 9:53:06 AM PDT by Vigilanteman (Obama: Fake black man. Fake Messiah. Fake American. How many fakes can you fit in one Zer0?)
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To: blam

Once Argentina defaults I’d be willing to bet that the Kirchner regime will try to invade the Falklands again in order to secure the oil and gas wealth of those islands. And, of course, to distract the Argentine street from the fact that their government screwed up. Again.


6 posted on 07/03/2014 9:59:02 AM PDT by MeganC (Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity.)
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To: blam

For some reason the stocks of Argentinean companies are doing really well.


7 posted on 07/03/2014 10:01:45 AM PDT by Moonman62 (The US has become a government with a country, rather than a country with a government.)
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To: blam

As sad as it makes me...one day we will be in the same boat....


8 posted on 07/03/2014 10:05:12 AM PDT by Popman ("Resistance to Tyrants is Obedience to God" - Thomas Jefferson)
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To: Moonman62

“For some reason the stocks of Argentinean companies are doing really well.”

Probably because they represent equity in physical capital and land, so for Argentinians, stocks are better than the local “money”. This is typical in all countries with fiat currencies.

Oops! I must be wrong, because that would include the USA!


9 posted on 07/03/2014 10:11:27 AM PDT by headsonpikes (Mass murder and cannibalism are the twin sacraments of socialism - "Who-whom?"-Lenin)
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To: blam

We have some dealings with some Argentine business people. First rate, decent, courteous, salt of the earth folks. I can’t tell you the depth of contempt, and more, that they have for their government. They are trapped and they know it. They are targets and they know it. I imagine that they have some lively discussions that they are unwilling to share with foreigners. Things could get pretty rough, fast.


10 posted on 07/03/2014 10:20:38 AM PDT by sphinx
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To: headsonpikes; Moonman62
"Probably because they represent equity in physical capital and land, so for Argentinians, stocks are better than the local “money”. This is typical in all countries with fiat currencies."

That's exactly why the Dow is hitting all time highs.

11 posted on 07/03/2014 10:21:28 AM PDT by blam
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To: blam

The US is following the same trail, except the results will have a racial element - sort of like a national Detroit on steroids.

Then the shooting really starts.


12 posted on 07/03/2014 10:33:49 AM PDT by Fear The People (When the government fears the people, you have LIBERTY.)
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To: blam

ping


13 posted on 07/03/2014 10:33:54 AM PDT by gattaca (The heart of the wise inclines to the right, but the heart of the fool to the left. Ecclesiastes10:2)
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To: Fear The People

Sadly, there will be no armed uprising in Argentina or Venezuela just like there wasn’t in Zimbabwe.

I am pretty sure the US won’t either. I would hope otherwise though.


14 posted on 07/03/2014 10:36:10 AM PDT by GeronL (Vote for Conservatives not for Republicans)
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To: Opinionated Blowhard

Look at Venezuela. Nothing works but everything is still moving. Airlines are still flying on IOU’s, hospitals are operating without basic supplies, food companies still trying to import (and mostly failing) - all of them owed billions and billions by a broke government.

There was an article about how a cargo ship going to Venezuela might sit there for weeks or months to be unloaded. That costs $$$.

A poster on the site said that Christmas cookies and candies started showing up in April or May. They have shortages of everything, of course. Incompetence is the law, apparently.


15 posted on 07/03/2014 10:42:13 AM PDT by GeronL (Vote for Conservatives not for Republicans)
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To: blam
Argentina is another South American country with a huge underclass the controls the economy.

It's happening here, too.

16 posted on 07/03/2014 10:45:32 AM PDT by freerepublicchat
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To: 17th Miss Regt
It works until you run out of other people’s money.

Actually, Argentina ran out of other people's money almost 15 years ago, and is trying desperately to run out of a new group of other peoples' money now, pretending they'll pay new investors what they would not pay the old investors.

What the folks in Argentina don't understand is that hedge funds and other types of so-called "speculators" have a role to play in risk mitigation that makes their borrowing possible.

What the folks at BI don't understand -- and have never understood -- is that Social Security is effectively the largest hedge fund in the world, and someday tens of millions of investors are going to be ruined. The US debt held by China is chicken feed compared to the debt held by Americans.

17 posted on 07/03/2014 10:49:48 AM PDT by FredZarguna (Das ist nicht nur nicht richtig, es ist nicht einmal falsch!)
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To: MeganC
Argentina already has oil and gas. It already has mineral wealth. And of course, it is one of the most successful agricultural countries the world has ever seen. Apparently not good enough, given the national character, or lack of it, to ensure successful nationhood.

In short, Argentina, like the US, is blessed with every resource. But, it is also cursed with government-sponsored class envy of the most malignant sort. That's what, IMNVHO, turned Argentina from one of the planet's most successful nations into the welfare mess it is today. Peronismo. It used class envy to invent a total Welfare State as its path to everlasting power.

When even that grew stale, massive illegal immigration from Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador, and even the Middle East (!) and other Third World hellholes was encouraged to cheapen the vote and increase the welfare budget. Cross the border tonight ...go on Argentine welfare tomorrow morning ... vote for your benefactors in the afternoon.

Cross the Andes into Chile, and see quite a difference in the country General Pinochet saved from becoming a Communist Satellite. But even there, prosperity is being attacked by classic left-wing policies.

Don't cluck and shake your head. We are next. Our successive governments since 1965 have overseen our transformation form a successful nation into more and more of a government welfare state. Our immigration policies have made us into what must shortly become this hemisphere's northernmost Latin American countries.

USA? Nah. Argentina North. And very soon.

18 posted on 07/03/2014 10:50:19 AM PDT by Kenny Bunk (The GOP is dying. What do we do now?)
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To: sphinx

Argentina may have a huge hyrdrocarbon resource in the Vaca Muerte (spelling?) region which will make it a decent exporter of oil and gas in the next 5 years or so.

Christina F. is term limited out in October 2015. Things will get better there despite her, but it will be a while.


19 posted on 07/03/2014 10:50:51 AM PDT by bajabaja (Too ugly to be scanned at the airports.)
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To: blam

God, she’s starting to look like Hillary.


20 posted on 07/03/2014 4:52:45 PM PDT by BobL
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