Brazilian Real Posts Weekly Drop on Chinese Demand
The Brazilian real, ranked as the best performing currency in
The Brazilian currency reached the lowest rate in 2010 versus the U.S. dollar this Friday as both international and national scenarios provided traders with pessimistic news that fueled an exodus of capital from the emerging South American economy. Not only in the Eurozone budget deficits are concerning traders, and in Brazil, despite central bankers referring to the problem as something temporary, the gap in national accounts is affecting the real’s outlook, while, in the international sphere, China’s lending restrictions are fueling speculations that demand for Brazilian commodities are likely to decline, also impacting real’s price in currency markets, specially versus a stronger greenback.
The global trading scenario is negative for emerging markets and
USD/BRL ended the week at 1.8740 after falling during all trading sessions this week, and from as low as 1.8050 last Monday.
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Earlier News About the Brazilian Real:
- Brazil Real Remains Near 2010 Record Low (2010-01-26)
- Brazilian Real Trades at Record Low on Obama's Speech (2010-01-22)
- Brazilian Real Drops Further on Risk Aversion (2010-01-21)
- Real Rebounds on Brazilian Stock Market (2010-01-18)
- Brazilian Real Declines on Treasury Plans (2010-01-14)