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To: BirdDog who wrote (46228)1/11/2002 3:37:03 PM
From: Sully-  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 65232
 
Argentina's peso devalues 41 pct, bank losses huge

By Alistair Bell

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina, Jan 11 (Reuters) - Argentina's currency dived on Friday on its return to the foreign exchange market after 10 years, imposing a 41 percent devaluation on ordinary Argentines who are losing patience at economic chaos.

The full extent of Argentina's financial turmoil began to hit home to global business as analysts warned of foreign banks losing $6.2 billion and a European chemical giant suffering.

Thousands of people took to the streets of Buenos Aires after midnight on Thursday to demonstrate against new government curbs on bank withdrawals, the first mass protests since 27 people died in riots in late December that toppled a government.

The peso, pegged at parity to the U.S. dollar in 1991 to fight inflation, closed on Friday at 1.65/1.70 per dollar on the free-floating market from the old rate of one-to-one.

But volume was low and exchange houses were quiet as Argentines, short of cash after new bank curbs and years of recession, shunned the new high price for the dollar.

New President Eduardo Duhalde last weekend fixed the peso at 1.40 to the dollar for foreign trade and official business, representing a devaluation of almost 30 percent.

The free market rate will be used for many transactions by the Argentine public, which sees the U.S. currency as a harbor of stability.

Analysts say the peso might drop to as much as 2 to the dollar in coming months if the government's sweeping measures fail to stop Latin America's No. 3 economy spinning further out of control.

On the streets of the capital, muggy in the heat of the Southern Hemisphere's summer, few sought dollars.

``The heat is nothing, it's the price that kills you,'' said Adriana, a 48-year-old toy saleswoman with debts in dollars lining up at a foreign exchange house.

She, and other potential customers, gave up and walked away when she found out how much a dollar would now cost her.

NEW PROTESTS

Some 10,000 people, exasperated by years of recession and mismanagement of the economy, protested in front of the Casa Rosada presidential palace after midnight on Thursday.

Four people were arrested for attempting to rob shops and a bank cash dispenser, a police spokesman said.

Police fired tear gas at stragglers after the demonstration. One protester was hit at close range in the abdomen by buckshot fired by police near the palace, witnesses said. He limped away, helped by friends.

Residents of apartment buildings in poor and wealthy districts of the capital alike also expressed disgust at the government, banging pots and pans on their balconies.

The latest protests were sparked by the Duhalde's attempts to protect brittle banks by allowing them to keep some deposits under wraps until 2003.

As well as angering savers, government intervention in the banking system has badly spooked big foreign banks with investments in Argentina. Spanish institutions in particular have been badly hit.

A decree converting bank loans of less than $100,000 into pesos, aimed at softened the blow of devaluation on ordinary people, has decimated banks' capital bases by devaluing the loans which represent some of their key assets.

Foreign banks are likely to lose all of their investments in Argentine subsidiaries and branches because of the crisis but will not see creditworthiness deteriorate, Standard & Poor's said.

``The sum total of equity capital is $6.2 billion and we do think that is probably a loss,'' Tanya Azarchs, credit analyst at the rating agency told a conference call.

GERMANS HIT

Analysts said German chemicals group BASF AG could lose tens of millions of euros in net profit this year as its oil and gas division suffers from devaluation and high tax in Argentina.

Spain's two biggest banks, Santander Central Hispano and Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria may be forced to pull out of Argentina altogether, analysts say.

Duhalde is the fifth president since December, when Fernando de la Rua was forced from power by looting and protests. Duhalde hails from the populist wing of the Peronist Party, which ran Argentina from 1989-99.

The government decreed on Thursday that checking accounts above $10,000 and savings accounts above $3,000 will be turned into fixed-term deposits -- which means they will be untouchable for at least a year.

Latin American financial markets were mostly firmer on Friday despite wariness of Argentina.

Brazilian, Mexican, and Chilean's stocks firmed. Brazil's currency, the real (BRBY - news), also strengthened, but the Chilean peso was weaker on nervousness about Argentina's new dual exchange rate system.

(With reporting by Karina Grazina, Brian Winter, Jorge Otaola, Alistair Scrutton, David Chance)

biz.yahoo.com



To: BirdDog who wrote (46228)1/11/2002 5:53:22 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 65232
 
Enron spread the wealth around Washington

By Susan Cornwell

WASHINGTON, Jan 11 (Reuters) - Former energy-trading giant Enron Corp. not only lavished campaign donations on President George W. Bush, but was one of America's biggest political contributors, spreading money across both parties on Capitol Hill.

Nearly half the current U.S. House of Representatives and almost three-quarters of the current Senate have been beneficiaries of Enron (NYSE:ENE - news) largesse in recent years, say the Washington watchdog groups that monitor campaign cash.

Since 1989, Enron has made a whopping $5.8 million in campaign donations, 73 percent to Republicans and 27 percent to Democrats, says the Center for Responsive Politics, an organization that tracks political giving.

Nearly half of these funds were donated during 1999-2000, when Enron was one of the top 50 organizational donors in the United States, the Center says.

The money kept coming in until just before Enron filed for bankruptcy on Dec. 2. Since then, as the controversy around Enron has grown, some donations have been given back.

Texans were by far the biggest Enron recipients, and Republicans got more than Democrats. Bush, being both a Texan and a Republican, and a friend of Enron chairman Kenneth Lay to boot, did very well.

Enron was Bush's biggest political patron as he headed into the 2000 presidential election. In all it has made $623,000 in contributions to his campaigns since 1993, when he was raising money for his first Texas gubernatorial race, according to the Center for Public Integrity, another follow-the-money group.

'MONEY FOR ACCESS'

But the giving did not stop after election day. Enron officials contributed $10,500 to his Florida recount committee, and when the recount was ended, they donated $300,000 for the inaugural celebrations, said Holley Bailey, researcher for the Center for Responsive Politics.

``I think what is interesting about their giving over the last year, is that they used any method possible to support President Bush's campaign run,'' she said.

What Enron got in exchange for the money was access, Bailey asserted. She noted that Lay had met Vice President Dick Cheney during last year's California energy crisis, at the same time the administration was formulating its energy policy.

``One thing is clear. They have written checks to a lot of people in this town and I guess that gets their phone calls answered when they call Cabinet secretaries,'' Bailey said.

It was disclosed this week that Lay telephoned two Cabinet officials last fall as the company's financial situation worsened. Enron on Dec. 2 made the largest bankruptcy court filing in U.S. history.

The Justice Department has opened a criminal probe into Enron's collapse, which wiped out the pensions of thousands, and several congressional committees are also investigating.

MIDAS TOUCH

The White House points out, accurately, that Enron also contributed money to lawmakers, Democrats among them. Indeed, on Capitol Hill, few have escaped Enron's Midas touch.

Texas Senators Kay Bailey Hutchison and Phil Gramm, both Republicans, top the list, having received $99,500 and $97,350 respectively in campaign contributions from Enron, the Center for Responsive Politics says.

But senior Democrats and those on committees relevant to Enron's energy-trading business got donations too. For example, Sen. Charles Schumer of New York, a Democrat, received $21,933, the Center said. He is on the energy committee.

Senate Democratic leader Tom Daschle of South Dakota received $6,000 in Enron contributions. Democratic Sen. Joseph Lieberman of Connecticut, who chairs the governmental affairs committee that will probe Enron's fall, got a $2,000 donation.

In the House, the top beneficiary of Enron generosity, Democrat Ken Bentsen of Texas, has received $42,750 in contributions since he was elected in 1994.

But Bentsen is giving back $2,000 of Enron money he has received since the last election -- not to Enron, though. He is looking for a fund that will help its laid-off employees.

He's not the only one shunning Enron money now. The National Republican Senatorial Campaign Committee as well as the Republican Governors Association recently returned Enron donations totaling $160,000.

And the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee is giving to charity a $100,000 Enron donation that it received in late November, just days before Enron filed for bankruptcy.

Asked why he topped the House list of Enron recipients, Bentsen explained that his district is in the greater Houston area, where Enron is based, and that he has had to raise a lot of money over his career fighting well-financed challengers.

``The bottom line is somedays I've enjoyed support from Enron and other days I haven't,'' Bentsen added. He recalls Lay supported his opponent, Dolly Madison McKenna, in 1996.

``He (Lay) said, 'I think she's going to be better than you.' It really made me mad,'' Bentsen said.

biz.yahoo.com



To: BirdDog who wrote (46228)1/11/2002 6:15:09 PM
From: Ex-INTCfan  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 65232
 
They have too much money to go to prison. People with money don't go there.