Brazil Summons G20 Members for Meeting This Weekend in Washington

Bovespa Brazil's finance Minister, Guido Mantega, at the request of Henry Paulson, the US Treasury secretary, has called for a meeting this coming Saturday, October 11, of the G20, a group composed of the rich countries of the G7 plus the European Union, Australia, China, India, Brazil, Argentina, Mexico, Russia, Indonesia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, South Korea and Turkey.

Mantega, who is the current president of the G20, was expected to travel to Washington this Wednesday to participate in the annual meetings of the IMF and the World Bank. Henrique Meirelles, the president of Brazil's Central Bank, will also be in Washington for the meeting and encounters with investors.

Paulson suggested the gathering of G20 Finance ministers and Central Bank chiefs as a way to discuss other options to deal with the world's financial  meltdown. In a note to the press Mantega wrote: "The goal is to discuss the aspects of the world financial crisis and its impact on the global economy."

The Brazilian Foreign minister, Celso Amorim, suggested that the Brics (Brazil, Russia, China, India and South Africa) operate in a coordinated fashion in order to fight the effects of the global crisis.

"I think this is very important," he noted, "and this crisis drives home the need to coordinate with other emerging economies, such as, the so-called Brics. We have a growing huge trade with these countries, however,  we cannot leave it at the mercy of credit difficulties that can originate from rich countries' problems."

The Bovespa, Brazil's stock exchange fell for the 5th day in a row, this Wednesday, October 8, accumulating losses of 23% in October alone. The Ibovespa, the Bovespa index slipped 1,546. points or 3.9%, closing at 38,593.54, this Wednesday.

Meanwhile the real, the Brazilian currency, declined as much as 10% against the US dollar during the day reaching 2.45 reais a dollar before recuperating and closing at 2.272 reais, a 1.73% drop.

LatAm Down

Latin American markets finished sharply lower on Tuesday under pressure from the slide on Wall Street, falling commodity prices and uncertainty about the future. Growth forecasts have also been downgraded.

Brazil's Bovespa fell 4.7% to 40,139.85, for the fourth time in a row. It was the first close under the 41,000-points level since May 2006.

Mexico's IPC declined 4% to 20,884.74 for its first finish under 21,000 since September 2006. It has closed lower for fourth straight sessions.

Argentina's Merval fell 2.7% to 1,384.60, the lowest since July 2005 having accumulated losses of 8.47% in two days. Chile's IPSA tumbled 4.3% to 2, 345.22, while the US dollar kept approaching the 600 Pesos benchmark.

The Brazilian real remained under pressure with the US dollar gaining as much as 5.7%, pushing it down to its lowest level in two years. The dollar against gained against the Mexican Peso by 4%.

On Wall Street, the Dow industrials (DJI) crumbled 508 points to 9,447.11 after investors turned its focus from the Federal Reserve's entrance into the commercial paper to ease frozen credit markets, to minutes from the central bank's meeting in September that showed that rate policymakers set aside rate cuts.

Bernanke said Tuesday that commodity prices are likely to move even lower because of the global economic slowdown

Given the dependence of the region on commodity exports experts are downgrading economic forecasts for a number of LatAm economies. Brazil is expected to expand 3% instead of 3.5% just a couple of weeks ago. Mexico’s outlook was cut to 1.7% from 3.2%; Argentina to 2.5% from its previous forecast of 4.4%; and Chile to 3.2% from 4.2%.

Bzz/MP

Tags:

You May Also Like

Way, Way Back

A trip from Fortaleza into the interior of Ceará state is an experience in ...

Sarkozy Attacks Protectionism in Visit to Brazil

France's President, Nicolas Sarkozy, in a visit to Brazil, defended this Monday, December 22, ...

Oil Rich Venezuela and Brazil Get Ready for War. But Against Who?

In recent years President Hugo Chávez has become Washington's ultimate Latin American nemesis, with ...

Biodiesel plant in the Brazilian Northeast

Brazil’s Restrictive Laws on Biodiesel Are Turning Investors to Europe

Biofuels are in the news and Brazil is consequently taking center stage. As Lula ...

Investing in Brazil Is Investing in South America, Says Lula

Talking in São Paulo, where he took part in the Brazil & Partners: Investment ...

Brazil Gets World’s First Grass-Powered Electrical Plant

Brazil is going to have, starting next year, the first grass-powered thermoelectric mill in ...

Brazil Goes After France’s Technology to Build Its First Nuclear Submarine

Brazil wants to become the first country in Latin America to have a nuclear ...

LETTERS

Brazil—at its current level of almost a trillion reais a year, five thousand reais ...

Petrobras Pre-Salt Production to Reach 100,000 Barrels a Day in 2010

Petrobras, the Brazilian government-controlled oil multinational together with Repsol-YPF and BG Group has found ...

Aquiraz, a Brazilian Beach Far Away from This Mad World

As a former resident of the state of Ceará, I have fond memories of ...