Crisis Replay... Soon Argentina Will Be on Sale Again
By Ronan McMahon, editor, Real Estate Trend AlertThursday, September 6, 2012
Just over a decade ago, Argentina spectacularly unraveled with the biggest default in history – $100 billion.
Dollar deposits were converted to pesos. Then, overnight, the peg
of one-to-one with the dollar was broken. The unpegged currency was
immediately devalued. Savings were wiped out. Banks were set alight. And
locals took to the streets in protest.
That crisis created the biggest buying opportunity of a decade.
During the fire sales, you could have picked up a historic, high-end
property in Buenos Aires or a vineyard in Mendoza for a song.
Today, Argentina is back in a bind. There is a strong possibility
of another crack-up within the next year. And then we'll have the same
opportunity we had a decade ago.
The signs are all there. The streets of Buenos Aires have recently seen the return of the backstreet currency exchange.
According to the official exchange rate, which is subject to capital
controls, 4.4 pesos buys you a dollar. But on the street, people are
happy to pay up to 6.7. Inflation runs at 25%. The purchasing power of an
Argentine's peso savings is going down by one-quarter each year.
The government claims inflation is 9.9% and has outlawed calculating
or quoting any other inflation rate. Forty percent of dollar deposits
have been withdrawn from Argentina since last October. Now there are
capital controls. You need special permission to move your dollars
overseas.
To take a foreign vacation, Argentines have to apply to a
bureaucrat for permission and explain where they got the money for the
trip. And there are rumors that it will be made illegal to talk about
the existence of the shadow market exchange rate for dollars.
But a lot of Argentines' dollars and pesos don't reside in bank
accounts. Property transactions typically take place in special rooms in
lawyers' offices, and they're cash deals. There's that much distrust of
banks. They are fine for day-to-day things like paying your electric
bill. Not for your savings, though.
And these transactions more often than not take place in dollars...
If you pay in dollars, you could get 25% off the price of property. The
government has outlawed this, making the buying and selling of real
estate in dollars illegal. Just one more rule Argentines will find their
way around.
By some reports, if an Argentine company complied with all the
taxes and tariffs it faces, they would eat up more than the company's
pretax profits. So the shadow economy thrives... by necessity, it seems,
rather than greed to pay less tax. Middle-class day-trippers take the
ferry to Uruguay to put their savings in deposit boxes. The rich spend
millions on condos in Punta del Este, Uruguay.
For Argentines, real estate is their bank. They understand inflation
and expropriation from bank and pension accounts. If they have some
spare cash, they'll buy an apartment. Or a beach home across the Río de
la Plata in Uruguay. Or a condo in Miami.
Now, fewer Argentines are using local real estate as a hedge
against inflation. New construction and permit applications have fallen
off a cliff. They just want their cash out.
The government claims that the rate of outflow has slowed. But with
every passing week, companies and individuals figure out new ways to get
their cash out. For instance, companies buy financial instruments locally
in pesos that they immediately resell in New York for dollars.
Argentines have seen it all before. When a government and a banking
system take your life's work with the stroke of a pen, you don't
forget. If you're lucky enough to rebuild your savings, the next time
you will be ready. And the harder the Argentine president, Cristina
Kirchner, tries to keep assets in the country, the more they'll be
siphoned out.
Meantime, Argentina is all but frozen out of international debt
markets. The government hasn't reached a settlement with the group of
creditors (known as the Paris Club) since its last default. So the
country and the banking system desperately need these deposits to stay
afloat.
But they continue to do incredibly dumb things. Two years ago,
President Kirchner seized private pension accounts. Now she is going to
lend $4.4 billion of this money, at a rate of one-tenth the inflation
rate, to new home buyers. A lottery will decide who gets the loans – not
capacity to repay.
Argentina has major competitive advantages in beef production. But
land under beef farming is contracting. Beef producers face large and
complicated export tariffs and are forced to sell cheaply to the
domestic market. Many have moved operations to Uruguay or switched to
soya.
It's one crackpot idea after another. And the cycle repeats.
Expropriating your citizens' savings or international companies like YPF
(a subsidiary of Spanish oil company Repsol), which President Kirchner
nationalized last April, might buy you some time. But not much. The
writing is on the wall.
In the last crisis, the trigger event was Argentina's massive
default on its sovereign debt. This time around, Argentina doesn't face
that scenario. Government spending has to be funded from printing
presses, taxes, and expropriation of personal or company assets. It's
hard to see how the government can collect more taxes. The printing
presses are already causing the inflation and the rush to backstreet
currency-exchange brokers. There's a limit to what you can expropriate.
This time around, the trigger event for a full-scale crisis will be
the country running out of hard currency. There will be no money to pay
for imports. Argentina can make do without more Porsches and Gucci
handbags, but the country will grind to a halt if industry and
energy-producers can't get their hands on crucial imports. The factories
will shut.
Things will have to get really bad before we're in a "buy"
situation. Pay attention if you turn on your TV and see news flashes of
burning banks and of factories that don't have hard currency to buy raw
materials, locking out their workers. If you turn on your TV a second
day and see similar reports, then book your flight. Your dollars will go a
long way.
Comparisons between the high-end neighborhoods of Paris and Buenos
Aires are correct. It's a world-class capital, with a wealth of cultural
activities, fine dining, and shopping. Buy when the Argentine capital is
in turmoil, and you'll be sitting on prime real estate in one of the
world's finest cities.
If you've ever dreamed of owning your own vineyard, I can think of
no better place than Mendoza, Argentina's most famous wine-producing
region. Mendoza sits at the foot of the Andes, 600 miles west of Buenos
Aires. Soil and climate are perfect here for wine production.
Argentina long held promise. In 1900, it was the world's
sixth-richest country – richer than the U.S. Immigrants flooded from
Europe. The British came to build the railways. They brought along Irish
and Italians. The Spanish came.
What followed is textbook mismanagement. When it comes to a head
again, we'll have a full-blown crisis. And an opportunity to pounce once
more.
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