Brazil’s concerns are perhaps justified,
since the Brazilian Real has surged to a 2-year high, and is amazingly
not worth more than prior to the collapse of the Lehman Brothers and the
ignition of the global financial crisis. (If anything, this shows just
how far we’ve come in returning to stability). According to Goldman
Sachs, the Real is now the most overvalued major currency in the world.
This is confirmed by The Economist’s Big Mac Index,
which shows that in Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) terms, Brazil is now
the third most expensive country in the world, behind only Norway and
Switzerland.
As I said at the beginning of this post, the Bank of Brazil has several tools up its sleeve. It has already resumed “surprise daily auctions to buy excess dollars in the spot market” (suspended in 2006), in which investors can trade Dollars for Brazilian government debt. It is also proposing reverse currency swaps, which would serve a similar purpose. ” ‘The order is to buy, buy and buy,’ ” said a government source. It has purchased nearly $1 Billion in foreign currency in the month of September alone, and has pledged to deploy its $10 Billion Sovereign investment fund if necessary. Finally, there is talk of raising the tax rate (currently 2%) on all foreign capital inflows, though there is no real timetable for such a move.
Alas, while the government of Brazil is certainly sincere in its intentions to hold down the Real, it lacks the wherewithal. Its $1 Billion intervention in September was dwarfed by the $20+ Billion spent by the Bank of Japan in one day to hold down the Yen. Even controlling for the difference in the size of their respective economies, Brazil has still been thoroughly outspent. Its $10 Billion investment fund pales in comparison to the ~$1 Trillion forex reserves of Japan. In short, Brazil would be wise to avoid full-fledged engagement in currency war.
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