Rodrigo Aravena News
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Chile kept the key interest rate unchanged yesterday for a 13th straight month as the central bank balances South America’s slowest inflation with the region’s second-fastest growth rate.
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Chile kept the key interest rate unchanged today for a 13th straight month as the central bank maintains Latin America’s slowest inflation with the region’s second-fastest growth rate.
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UBS AG’s Rafael De La Fuente was alone last month when he said Chilean interest rates would rise in the first half, just as inflation slowed to a 2 1/2-year low.
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Chilean policy makers kept borrowing costs on hold today for the 12th consecutive month after faster- than-expected economic growth didn’t stop the inflation rate falling to the lowest level in Latin America.
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Chilean traders and investors expect policy makers to raise the benchmark interest rate by January next year as economic growth boosts inflation rates in the Andean nation.
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Chile’s central bank will probably raise its benchmark interest rate today after pausing last month as accelerating economic growth has pushed inflation expectations to the upper limit of its target range.
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Chile’s economy expanded a faster- than-forecast 7.1 percent in July from a year earlier, confirming economists’ expectations the central bank will continue to raise its benchmark interest rate this month.
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Chile’s central bank raised its overnight interest rate for a fourth straight month as inflation expectations rise on rebounding domestic demand and the fastest economic growth since 2005.
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Chile’s peso recorded a fifth straight weekly gain after industrial output grew more than forecast and concern of a double-dip U.S. recession eased.
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The Chilean peso fell the most in a week as the price of copper, the country’s main export, declined faster than oil prices, weakening the country’s terms of trade.
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