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This Is The End: Venezuela Runs Out Of Money To Print New Money
Zero Hedge ^ | 04/27/2016 | Tyler Durden

Posted on 04/27/2016 5:29:50 PM PDT by SeekAndFind

Back in February, when we commented on the unprecedented hyperinflation about the be unleashed in the Latin American country whose president just announced that he would expand the "weekend" for public workers to 5 days...

... we joked that it is unclear just where the country will find all the paper banknotes it needs for all its new physical currency. After all, central-bank data shows Venezuela more than doubled the supply of 100-, 50- and 2-bolivar notes in 2015 as it doubled monetary liquidity including bank deposits. Supply has grown even as Venezuela has fewer U.S. dollars to support new bolivars, a result of falling oil prices. 

This question, as morbidly amusing as it may have been to us if not the local population, became particularly poignant recently when for the first time, one US Dollar could purchase more than 1000 Venezuela Bolivars on the black market (to be exact, it buys 1,127 as of today).

And then, as if on cue the WSJ responded: "millions of pounds of provisions, stuffed into three-dozen 747 cargo planes, arrived here from countries around the world in recent months to service Venezuela’s crippled economy. But instead of food and medicine, the planes carried another resource that often runs scarce here: bills of Venezuela’s currency, the bolivar.

The shipments were part of the import of at least five billion bank notes that President Nicolás Maduro’s administration authorized over the latter half of 2015 as the government boosts the supply of the country’s increasingly worthless currency, according to seven people familiar with the deals.

More planes were coming: in December, the central bank began secret negotiations to order 10 billion more bills which would effectively double the amount of cash in circulation. That order alone is well above the eight billion notes the U.S. Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank each print annually—dollars and euros that unlike bolivars are used world-wide.

Where things got even more ridiculous for the government where the largest bill in denomination is 100 Bolivars, is how much physical currency it needed, and the cost to print it:

The high cost of the printing binge is an especially heavy burden as Venezuela reels from the oil-price collapse and 17 years of free-spending socialist rule that have left state finances in shambles.

 

Most countries around the world have outsourced bank-note printing to private companies that can provide sophisticated anticounterfeiting technologies like watermarks and security strips. What drives Venezuela’s orders is the sheer volume and urgency of its currency needs.

 

The central bank’s own printing presses in the industrial city of Maracay don’t have enough security paper and metal to print more than a small portion of the country’s bills, the people familiar with the matter said. Their difficulties stem from the same dollar shortages that have plagued Venezuela’s centralized economy, as the Maduro administration struggles to pay for imports of everything, including cancer medication, toilet paper and insect repellent to battle the mosquito-borne Zika virus.

Wait a minute, why not just print a single 100,000,000 Bolivar note instead of one million 100 bolivar bills? After all the savings on the printing, let along the air freight, to the already insolvent country will be tremendous and allow it to pretend it is not a failed nation for at least a few more days? It is here that the sheer brilliance of the rulers of this socialist paradise shines through:

Currency experts say the logistical challenges of importing and storing massive quantities of bank notes underscore an undeniable truth: Venezuela is spending a lot more than it needs because the government hasn’t printed a higher-denomination bank note—revealing a misplaced fear, analysts say, that doing so would implicitly acknowledge high inflation the government publicly denies.

 

“Big bills do not cause inflation. Big bills are the result of inflation,” said Owen W. Linzmayer, a San Francisco-based bank-note expert and author who catalogs world currencies. “Larger bills can actually save money for the central bank because instead of having to replace 10 deteriorated notes, you only need five or one,” he said.

 

The Venezuelan central bank’s latest orders have been exclusively only for 100- and 50-bolivar notes, according to the seven people familiar with the deals, because 20s, 10s, 5s and 2s are worth less than the production cost.

 

Mr. Maduro and his allies say galloping consumer prices reflect a capitalist conspiracy to destabilize the government.

Well, no, but at this point one may as well sit back and laugh at the idiocy of it all.  But at least we will give Maduro one thing: he has done away with the pretense that when push comes to shove, the state and the central bank (and thus commercial banks) are two different things: "the president in late December changed a law to give himself full control over the central bank, stripping congressional oversight just as his political opponents took control of the National Assembly for the first time in 17 years."

Sadly, that did nothing for the imploding economy and country, whose morgues are now overflowing due to rampant social violence.

Of course, the punchline of all the above means that Venezuela has to buy bolivars from abroad at any cost. "It’s easy money for a lot of these companies," one of the people with details on the negotiations said. 

The problem is that it is "very difficult money" for Venezuela which needs to pay in hard dollars to print its rapidly devaluing domestic currency. In fact, among the sources of funds to purchase its own money was the liquidation of its gold reserves, which as we reported recently, Venezuela has been quietly selling to willing offshore buyers.

* * *

All of this brings us to today's latest update in the sad story of Venezuela's terminal collapse: today Bloomberg wrote a story that basically covers everything said above, noting that "Venezuela’s epic shortages are nothing new at this point. No diapers or car parts or aspirin -- it’s all been well documented. But now the country is at risk of running out of money itself."

Indeed, as we hinted three months ago, "Venezuela, in other words, is now so broke that it may not have enough money to pay for its money."

Among the new information revealed by Bloomberg is that last month, De La Rue, the world’s largest currency maker, sent a letter to the central bank complaining that it was owed $71 million and would inform its shareholders if the money were not forthcoming. The letter was leaked to a Venezuelan news website and confirmed by Bloomberg News.

"It’s an unprecedented case in history that a country with such high inflation cannot get new bills,” said Jose Guerra, an opposition law maker and former director of economic research at the central bank. Late last year, the central bank ordered more than 10 billion bank notes, surpassing the 7.6 billion the U.S. Federal Reserve requested this year for an economy many times the size of Venezuela’s.

Venezuela had prudently diversified its money printing relationships, and ahead of the 2015 congressional elections, the central bank tapped the U.K.’s De La Rue, France’s Oberthur Fiduciaire and Germany’s Giesecke & Devrient to bring in some 2.6 billion notes, Bloomberg adds. Before the delivery was completed, the bank approached the companies directly for more. De La Rue took the lion’s share of the 3-billion-note order and enlisted the Ottawa-based Canadian Bank Note Company to ensure it could meet a tight end-of-year deadline.

As we reported four months ago, the cash arrived in dozens of 747 jets and chartered planes. Under cover of security forces and snipers, it was transferred to armored caravans where it was spirited to the central bank in dead of night.

But while Venezuela was already planning its future cash orders, the cash vendors were starting to get worried. According to company documents, De La Rue began experiencing delays in payment as early as June. Similarly, the bank was slow to pay Giesecke & Devrient and Oberthur Fiduciaire. So when the tender was offered, the government only received about 3.3 billion in bids, bank documents show.

Which led to an interesting phenomenon: when it comes to counterparty risk, one usually has in mind digital funds or electronic securities. In this case, however, the counterparty risk involved cold, hard cash: "Initially, your eyes grow as big as dish plates," said one person familiar with matter. “An order big enough to fill your factory for a year, but do you want to completely expose yourself to a country as risky as Venezuela?"

As Venezuela's full implosion emerges, the answer has now become obvious, and companies are backing away. With its traditional partners now unenthusiastic about taking on new business, the central bank is in negotiations with others, including Russia’s Goznack, and has a contract with Boston-based Crane Currency, according to documents and industry sources.

We expect these last ditch efforts to obtain much needed paper currency for the hyperinflating nation will break down shortly, forcing Venezuela into one of two choices: do away with cash entirely and resort to barter, or begin printing high-denomination bills which in turn will only facilitate even faster hyperinflation as there will be no actual physical limit on how much something can cost; as of right now the very physical limit is how many 100 bolivar bills one can put on a wheelbarrow.

Steve Hanke, a professor of applied economics at Johns Hopkins University, who has studied hyperinflation for decades, says that to maintain faith in the currency when prices spiral, governments often add zeros to bank notes rather than flood the market.

“It’s a very bad sign to see people running around with wheelbarrows full of money to buy a hot dog,” he said. “Even the cash economy starts breaking down."

In Venezuela's case it is sadly too late.



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Cuba; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; Russia
KEYWORDS: bitcoin; cryptocurrency; gold; goldbugs; hugochavez; money; nicaragua; nicolasmaduro; socialism; tylerdurden; tylerdurdenmyass; venezuela; zerohedge
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To: chuckee
"I hope they also imported enough wheelbarrows"

Even if they did they would probably cost many billions of Bolivars.

21 posted on 04/27/2016 5:51:47 PM PDT by Da Bilge Troll (Defeatism is not a winning strategy!)
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To: SeekAndFind
They just need to crank it up a notch like Zimbabwe did. 11? This banknote goes to 100 Trillion!


22 posted on 04/27/2016 5:52:07 PM PDT by xp38
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To: SaveFerris

K.


23 posted on 04/27/2016 5:56:02 PM PDT by RushIsMyTeddyBear (<<<<<<< he no longer IS my 'teddy bear'.)
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To: disndat

Maybe they can print their money on toilet paper, since that’s all it’s good for. Single ply for 100s, double ply for 1,000s.


24 posted on 04/27/2016 5:57:41 PM PDT by Hugin (Conservatism without Nationalism is a fraud.)
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To: SeekAndFind

http://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.thebrokebackpacker.com%2Fchanging-money-venezuelas-black-market%2F&h=xAQGnDxja

(From 2015, but still valuable for understanding inflation and black market vs “official” exchange rates.)

“How to change money in Venezuela.”

I needed to change money in Venezuela. My driver knew a guy who knew a guy who knew someone who would change my cash at a rate of 210 bolivars to the dollar. With a beer costing just 25 bolivars and a bed starting at 300 bolivars this seemed like a pretty good deal to me.

I waited in a local shop, bored, watching the ceiling fan go round and round in a pathetic attempt to banish to heat. I had just 500 bolivars, approximately $2, left in my wallet so ideally I needed to change money today. If I couldn’t, it was hardly a disaster, with just one dollar I could buy four beers, jump in a taxi, snack on half a dozen empanadas and still have change for an ice cream. Venezuela was budget backpacking at it’s best, I could live like a king for under $50 a week. Even an internal flight would only set me back around $6.

A man in a dark suit appeared, hurriedly walked towards the store, a grocery bag clutched firmly under one arm. He rushed in and bade the proprietor close the door. A rent-a-thug stood nearby with what looked like a metal chair leg in one hand, watching me carefully. The harassed-looking money changer emptied the grocery bag onto the tabletop. Coloured bills spilled across the table towards me, I had nearly one thousand bills to count. I handed over a single hundred dollar bill I had hidden in a photo album months before and began the laborious task of tying up the notes with elastic bands, I needed over a dozen. Nobody had told me it would be this complicated to change money in Venezuela…

Officially, backpacking in Venezuela should be unbelievably expensive. At the oft-cited rate of 6 bolivars to the dollar, a basic meal would cost around $15. Just three weeks ago, the black-market rate for a single dollar bill was around 17o bolivars. In a bid to end the insane inflation rates, the government decided to raise the official rate of exchange for USD from 6 bolivars to 150.

The government hoped that foreigners would stop exchanging dollars on the black market due to the more realistic rate now available at the banks and that Venezuelans would stop buying up dollars due to a decreased profit margin on the black market. The plan had backfired drastically and civil unrest had risen sharply. Within a week the black market rate for dollars had risen from 170 to nearly 300. Venezuelans were just as keen to buy dollars as ever and, at nearly twice the official rate, the handful of backpackers in the country were more than happy to keep on exchanging dollar bills for fat wads of cash which could be made into comfortable beds to sleep on (I actually did this, I may have had a few too many 10 cent beers!)

With spiraling inflation making the bolivar more and more worthless, Venezuelans are desperate to change their bolivars at almost any rate, with dollars and euros being a much safer way to hold savings. Many Venezuelans are keen to leave the country, hoping to find work abroad, but with the government only allowing it’s citizens to purchase a measly $500 a year, after mountains of paperwork, from the bank more and more people are turning to the black market as a means to cash out and get out; Venezuela has some of the highest outgoing emigration numbers in the world.

If you’re in Venezuela and keen to change money yourself, be sure to check out dolartoday.com which gives you an idea of the black market rate for dollars and euros; you will never get the rate portrayed here but should aim for around 20-30 bolivars less than this. The rate changes drastically, in just one month in Venezuela I changed dollars for between 170 and 230 bolivars a pop. With rates like these, the country is unbelievably cheap so try not to be too much of a hard-ass on the people your changing with; exchanging bolivars for dollars is one of the few ways Venezuelans can protect their savings.

It is important to note that if you try and arrange things from outside of Venezuela, you will be asked to pay in USD at the official rate. A much better plan is to bring your USD to Venezuela and then change them on the black market. To find someone willing to exchange USD with you, simply ask at your guesthouse or hostel, or ask other backpackers in the country. I do not have the phone number of any money exchangers – I literally just took to the street and tracked people down.

When carrying dollars in Venezuela, be extremely careful to conceal them properly. There have been many reports of foreigners being shaken down by the police, especially at road-blocks and border crossings. For this trip; I carried $200 hidden in a fold in my belt as well as more dollars concealed between two laminated photographs (which had to be cut open) in my ‘photo book’ from home to show to curious folks I may meet on the road. In the end, I barely even spent $300 in a month in Venezuela even though I had to hire a guide for trekking on two occasions!


25 posted on 04/27/2016 5:59:07 PM PDT by Travis McGee (www.EnemiesForeignAndDomestic.com)
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To: Hugin

That and rolling paper. Twist up a big fatty with a grand note and leave your cares behind.


26 posted on 04/27/2016 6:00:01 PM PDT by disndat
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To: SeekAndFind

Isn’t this what will happen if any of those schemes to give non-workers a minimum income ever becomes reality?

Printing money without having the economic base to back it up is useless. Money by itself is worthless. Only goods and services have value. If no one is producing those goods and services, no amount of increasing the money supply can compensate.

Socialism. What a wonderful thing. /s


27 posted on 04/27/2016 6:07:34 PM PDT by exDemMom (Current visual of the hole the US continues to dig itself into: http://www.usdebtclock.org/)
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To: SaveFerris

They don’t see it. The world only see fiat money and all they want. WANT! That is what they see. Enslavement is not what they want to see.


28 posted on 04/27/2016 6:09:57 PM PDT by SkyPilot ("I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me." John 14:6)
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To: Stayfree

Double huh?

Democracy they’ve had. They voted themselves into that mess.

Trump will fix Venezuala? That is delusional.

Why would we even try?


29 posted on 04/27/2016 6:10:30 PM PDT by SampleMan (Feral Humans are the refuse of socialism.)
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To: SeekAndFind

The photo accompanying the article is not Venezuela.
It is from 2012 Somalia.


30 posted on 04/27/2016 6:10:49 PM PDT by MrBambaLaMamba (Obama - "I will stand with the Muslims")
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To: disndat

That’s what they are using the money for, toilet paper ran out months ago.


31 posted on 04/27/2016 6:13:03 PM PDT by eyeamok
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To: eyeamok

That is what I meant.


32 posted on 04/27/2016 6:18:43 PM PDT by disndat
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To: Stayfree

I dunno.
The Cubans pretty much run things in Venezuela.


33 posted on 04/27/2016 6:19:42 PM PDT by Eric in the Ozarks (Baseball players, gangsters and musicians are remembered. But journalists are forgotten.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Anyone that admits that they Vote DemoncRat should immediately be deported.

Give them a choice of going to Cuba, North Korea or Venezuela.


34 posted on 04/27/2016 6:22:16 PM PDT by Kickass Conservative (It is better to live one day as a lion than one hundred years as a sheep)
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To: Stayfree

Trump could. Cruz Can. Kasich won’t.


35 posted on 04/27/2016 6:24:38 PM PDT by Nuc 1.1 (Nuc 1 Liberals aren't Patriots. Remember 1789!)
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To: SeekAndFind

They can solve their problems by putting a woman on the 20 Bolivar note.

/s


36 posted on 04/27/2016 6:26:56 PM PDT by sauropod (Beware the fury of a patient man.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Ahhh shucks! I was hoping for a gazillion peso bill.


37 posted on 04/27/2016 6:29:30 PM PDT by Bullish (Face it, insanity is just not presidential.)
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38 posted on 04/27/2016 6:44:28 PM PDT by DoughtyOne (Ted Cruz, "But it's what plants need!")
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To: disndat

Nope! They’re reported to be out of toilet paper, and leaves. Now that they are out of printing paper for money, there definitely is no toilet paper available.

Singing “Shake a Hand, Shake a Hand”. NOT!


39 posted on 04/27/2016 6:51:40 PM PDT by MadMax, the Grinning Reaper
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To: SeekAndFind

Instead of saving pennies, we better start saving dollar bills to use for tp.


40 posted on 04/27/2016 6:53:48 PM PDT by bgill (CDC site, "We still do not know exactly how people are infected with Ebola")
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