Collectibles
The Mexican Peso Crisis: International Perspectives
(Paperback) Lynne Rienner Publishing 1996-07
Price:
$13.95
$13.95
Answers
I have $2310 in Mexican pesos. Which is $213 in U.S dollars.
I was wondering if I took it to the bank if they would transfer the Pesos to the U.S dollars?
Help!
Well, depending on where you live, you should be able to change them at any National Bank. Example, Bank of America, Bank One, Wells Fargo etc.
If you live near an Airport that would work better for you so you can get a better rate.
Chase bank customer tries to exchange peso for dollar and gets a shocking surprise
Mexican Peso Touches Highest Level Since November; Mexican Central Bank Kept Rate Unchanged at 4.5%, First Time Ever (Bloomberg News)
In late 1994, the Mexican government - which had been supporting the peso/US dollar exchange rate began to run out of reserves. Hot money which ...
I have 2 $500 Mexican peso coins and 3 $100 peso coins,the years on the coins are so small I'm having trouble reading them;but I think they may be from the 1980's. Are they worth anything anywhere in the U.S.?
500 PESOS:
http://worldcoingallery.com/countries/co in.php?image=img5/121-529&desc=Mexic o%20km529%20500%20Pesos%20(1986-1992)
1000 PESOS:
http://worldcoingallery.com/countries/co in.php?image=img5/121-536&desc=Mexic o%20km536%201000%20Pesos%20(1988-1992)%2
Biggest Rally in 2 Years Means Sell for Barclays: Mexico Credit
The biggest rally in Mexican peso bonds in two years is a sign to Barclays Plc and Silva Capital Management LLC to sell the debt on a bet the notes will slump as global investor demand for the safest assets wanes.
Yields on Mexico ’s benchmark peso bonds dropped 45 basis points in the past week, the most since March 2009, to 6.56 percent yesterday, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The average yield on emerging-market local-currency debt was little changed during the same period at 6.22 percent, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch.
The gains in Mexican bonds are unwarranted and will end as concerns the U.S. may default ease after the government raised the debt ceiling, said Alejandro Urbina, who oversees $800 million of emerging-market debt at Silva Capital. Mexican bonds have the highest correlation with U.S. Treasuries among Latin American government debt, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Yields on 10-year debt sold by the U.S, which buys 80 percent of Mexican exports, sank 34 basis points, or 0.34 percentage point, in the past week.
Mexican peso: technical rebound in a bearish trend. | FX Options ...
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Mexican Peso ETF List | ETF Universe
Although the Mexican Peso is currently gaining strength, that was not always the case. Originating during Spanish rule, the word “peso” means weight and was meant to refer to the gold or silver coins that were used as far back as the 16th century. Eventually, paper currency was added to the coins, and today the Mexican Peso is the 12th most traded currency on the planet, the third most used in the Americas and the number one form of “dinero” (money) in Latin America.
The Peso has an interesting history, and it is one that involved what was termed the, “Mexican Peso Crisis” of 1994, with the sudden devaluation of the peso in December of that year. This crisis is also known in Spanish as “el error de diciembres” or as “The December Mistake”, was a term coined by the then outgoing president Carlos Salinas de Gortari, in response to incoming President Zedillos immediate and sudden reversal of the tight currency policies of the Salinas de Gortari administration.
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