EuromoneyFXNews.com

EuromoneyFXNews.com

Sign up to receive free alerts from our new foreign exchange news service

Country risk survey monitoring political and economic stability of countries around the globe

October 2005

How the crisis felled Argentina's banks



Argentine banks  turn the corner
Reshaping the banking landscape


Vicens: with 20% of banks' assets
invested in public securities, the
soverign default weighed heavily
Argentina's banks suffered a triple whammy from the financial crisis that struck the country nearly four years ago. The first hit – which set in motion the turn of events that led to the eventual devaluation of the peso – came in November 2001.

With doubts emerging that the IMF would continue to prop up the economy and a real concern that the government would fail to repay its debt to its foreign creditors, thousands of Argentines, fearing for the safety of their deposits, rushed to their banks to get their money out.

As Paul Blustein, author of a book on the crisis, And The Money Kept Rolling In (And Out), notes: "A steadily increasing outflow of money from banks surged to...


The rest of this article is available to subscribers only

Please Subscribe or take a Free Trial below.
Already a subscriber? Log in here.