Re: mexico's largest oil field to die by 12/10- consequences?
Mexico’s Peso Headed to First Weekly Loss in Seven on Budget
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?p...d=aVIw8hjPzmQ0
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‘Notable Underperformer’
“The Mexican peso has been a notable underperformer in the emerging-market universe,” Upadhyaya said. “All of a sudden when risky assets as a whole were rallying strongly in the third quarter and the markets started to get more optimistic on the global growth scenario, Mexico finally started responding.”
Mexico faces the greatest “fiscal shock” in 30 years as the country’s oil output slumps, Finance Minister Agustin Carstens told lawmakers on Aug. 11.
The slide in oil production, which generates 38 percent of federal government revenue, along with falling tax collection from the recession, will widen the budget deficit this year to the equivalent of 3 percent of GDP from 2.1 percent in 2008, the government predicts.
Calderon said this month that officials may propose a combination of higher taxes and lower spending in a bid to keep a lid on next year’s budget gap. Standard & Poor’s cut the outlook on Mexico’s BBB+ debt rating -- the third-lowest investment-grade rating -- to “negative” from “stable” in May amid concern the deficit would continue to grow.
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Mexico’s Peso Headed to First Weekly Loss in Seven on Budget
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?p...d=aVIw8hjPzmQ0
"...
‘Notable Underperformer’
“The Mexican peso has been a notable underperformer in the emerging-market universe,” Upadhyaya said. “All of a sudden when risky assets as a whole were rallying strongly in the third quarter and the markets started to get more optimistic on the global growth scenario, Mexico finally started responding.”
Mexico faces the greatest “fiscal shock” in 30 years as the country’s oil output slumps, Finance Minister Agustin Carstens told lawmakers on Aug. 11.
The slide in oil production, which generates 38 percent of federal government revenue, along with falling tax collection from the recession, will widen the budget deficit this year to the equivalent of 3 percent of GDP from 2.1 percent in 2008, the government predicts.
Calderon said this month that officials may propose a combination of higher taxes and lower spending in a bid to keep a lid on next year’s budget gap. Standard & Poor’s cut the outlook on Mexico’s BBB+ debt rating -- the third-lowest investment-grade rating -- to “negative” from “stable” in May amid concern the deficit would continue to grow.
..."
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