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Feb 8, 2003, 10:47 AM
Post #7 of 19
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Re: [Brian In The Army] Banking In Mexico
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"Brian In The Army" writes: I would like to set up banking investments.... Brian, At present, I personally wouldn't classify a Mexican bank account to be a good investment. The problem is that the Mexican Peso (MXP) has had a historic trend of losing value in comparison to what I'm assuming is your base currency, the US Dollar (USD). In the past year this decline has been quite harsh. As a concrete example, let's say that on February 8, 2002, you had $2,000 USD floating around. You take half of the money ($1,000) and placed it in the First Bank of Sealy Posturpedic (i.e. you stuffed it into your mattress); the other half you convert into Mexican Pesos and place into the bank's Mexican counterpart, La Primera Banco del Colchón Sealy. Ignoring exchange rate discounts and transfer fees you'd undoubtedly encounter along the way, when you converted your money into MXP, at the 02/08/02 interbank exchange rate of 9.1830 MXP/USD you'd end up with $9,183 MXP for the mattress stuffing. Today, a year later, assuming no major bedbug/chinche transactions, you'd still have $1,000 USD in the US mattress, and $9,183 MXP in the Mexican mattress. If you now take the $1,000 USD and convert it into MXP for addition to the Mexican mattress, you can (again ignoring the costs of currency exchange) add $11,026 MXP to the stash. Why the $1,843 MXP difference? Today's (02/08/03) interbank exchange rate is $11.0260 MXP/USD, a change of some 20% from a year ago. With this kind of decline, I haven't wasted a lot of time researching what interest rates Mexican bank accounts are paying their depositors. My general impression is, however, that standard savings accounts are paying on the order of 1% interest (per annum), roughly the same as a US money market type account, and definitely nowhere in the neighborhood needed to offset the loss from the decline in currency value. On this and other Mexico-related forums, you'll also see references to "Lloyds" and the interest rates they're paying (ex "Just write a check on your U.S. bank, depositing to your Lloyds account, and you'll also earn a lot more interest on your money."). Lloyds in this case is the Operadora de Fondos Lloyd, S. A., a Mexican mutual fund/financial services management company unrelated to Lloyds TSB Group (the latest encarnation of the venerable British bank), which markets its services heavily to the english-language speaking community in Mexico. Lloyds operates a series of MXP denomination money market funds which like their counterpart financial mutual fund/financial services counterparts in the US, have different limits and operating rules (and account insurance, if any) than the money market accounts in banks and other savings institutions. With current yields running from 4.4-6.8% range, the interest paid on such accounts still comes nowhere near to offset the loss from the currency value decline.
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