Osvaldo Cruz News
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Chile’s peso rose to the strongest level in five months as Greek leaders reached a deal on austerity measures and copper gains bolstered trade prospects for the metal’s top-producing nation.
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Chilean interest-rate swaps rose the most in a month as traders reduced bets on lower borrowing costs amid today’s surprise growth in U.S. payrolls and an unexpected decline in unemployment in the Latin American country.
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Chile’s peso declined for the first time in six days as fresh concern that Europe’s debt crisis will deepen pulled down copper prices and reduced demand for higher- yielding assets such as emerging-market currencies.
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Chile’s peso rose to the strongest in three years, pushing through the level that prompted the central bank to start buying dollars, as the greenback slumped against the currencies of major U.S. trading partners.
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Chile’s peso rose to the highest level in more than two years as prices for copper, the South American country’s main export, surged to a record in London trading.
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Chile’s peso fell, and is headed to a second straight weekly decline, as concern that Europe’s debt crisis is deepening eroded demand for riskier, emerging-market assets.
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Chile’s peso weakened for a third day as stocks and copper declined worldwide on concern rising oil prices will slow the global economic recovery.
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Chile’s peso fluctuated as surging oil prices dimmed terms of trade for the energy-importing nation while traders priced in expectations of interest-rate rises.
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Chile’s peso was little changed from yesterday’s 31-month high after traders in a central bank survey said they don’t expect the currency to extend gains amid concern that the bank may buy U.S. dollars.
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Chile’s peso gained the most since May 2009, leading advances among major emerging-market currencies, as copper prices surged on optimism European policy makers will contain the region’s debt crisis.
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