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Peru Currency Hits Record Low, Bonds Fall

LONDON (Reuters) - Peru’s currency tumbled to a record low on its largest daily decline in over seven years after President Pedro Castillo appointed a member of his Marxist party as prime minister and did not yet name a finance minister, leaving the direction of policy and the economy uncertain.

The appointment of Guido Bellido as premier dimmed hopes for a moderate administration and sent bond spreads to safe-haven U.S. Treasuries to their widest in over a year.

The 2060 bond issue was down 1.3 cents on the dollar to trade at 89 cents, the 2032 bond fell 1 cent and its century bond was down 2.4 cents, Refinitiv data showed.

The benchmark stock index dropped 2.9% in morning trading and is on track to close at its lowest since November.

The local sol currency lost 3.1% to the dollar in early trading in Lima, the largest daily percentage drop in over seven years, hitting a record low of 4.054 per dollar.

Investors are growing wary about Peru’s prospects under Castillo, who last month won a razor-thin election with a self-described Marxist-Leninist party.

Bellido’s appointment on Thursday underlined the influence that the far-left Free Peru party will have in Castillo’s administration, which began on Wednesday and is set to last until 2026.

“It’s probably too early to make conclusions, but the opening gambit isn’t a positive one,” said Sailesh Lad at Axa Investment Managers, adding that the asset manager will maintain its small exposure to the debt of the Peruvian sovereign and corporates.

“We think there is going to be volatility, but I don’t think panic has set in and we are at the stage where (investors) need to exit the country,” Lad said. “At the same time, we haven’t reached the stage where we see opportunities.”

Spreads of Peru’s hard currency bonds over safe-haven U.S. Treasuries on the JPMorgan EMBI Global Diversified index have risen nearly 30 basis points in the last week to 199 bps - the widest gap since May 2020.

Castillo’s failure to appoint a finance minister exacerbated those concerns, JPMorgan said in a note.

“The extremely atypical political situation reinforces our call for a persistent scenario characterized by political, institutional, and economic uncertainty,” the bank’s Diego W. Pereira wrote.

Castillo swore in most of his cabinet on Thursday evening, but the favourite for the finance job, moderate left-wing economist Pedro Francke, left the venue shortly before the ceremony started, raising questions over whether he had rejected or lost the job at the last minute.

Castillo, who faces a balancing act between maintaining the faith of investors and improving life for the largely rural base that voted for him, has said he wants to raise taxes on mining to fund health and education reforms.

“A possible constitutional change – and therefore its final outcome – is likely to hamper long-term investment as firms should remain cautious,” said Andre Loes, economist at Morgan Stanley.

“What is left to support growth is the external backdrop, which should remain solid, except for copper, Peru’s main export item, whose prices are likely to drop due to lower demand.”

Peru is the world’s second-largest copper producer. Its 2022 fiscal deficit targets are likely to be revised higher, with about $4 billion of external bond issuance expected in the second half of 2021, Sebastian Vargas at Barclays wrote in a note.

Additional reporting and writing by Rodrigo Campos in New York; Editing by Catherine Evans and Alistair Bell

Source: Reuters

 


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