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ClarissaMach

Joined: 18 May 2006 Posts: 644 Location: Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
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Posted: Tue Feb 12, 2008 4:26 am Post subject: "Asset price", "Peg" |
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This is part of the text "The Asian Financial crisis of 1997-1998 and the behavior of Asian Stock Markets", by Urbi Garay. I'd like to understand the meaning of a few expressions, in bold:
These financial and asset price crises also set the stage for this second sub-period of large currency depreciations. This time, not only the currencies of Thailand, the Philippines, Malaysia, Indonesia and Singapore were affected, but those of South Korea and Taiwan also suffered. In fact, the sharp depreciation of Korea�s Won beginning in early November added a new and more troublesome dimension to the crisis given the significance of Korea as the eighth largest economy in the world; the magnitude of the depreciation of its currency which took place in less than two months; and the Korean Central Bank�s success in maintaining the peg ever since the Thai�s first devaluation (i.e. the �nominal anchor� of the largest of the Asian Tigers was suddenly lost). In addition, was the other important component of this second sub-period: the complete collapse of the Indonesian Rupiah that started at about the same time. _________________ Stormy Weather. |
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Bob S.

Joined: 29 Apr 2004 Posts: 1767 Location: So. Cal
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Posted: Thu Feb 14, 2008 12:44 pm Post subject: Re: "Asset price", "Peg" |
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| ClarissaMach wrote: |
These financial and asset price crises also set the stage for this second sub-period of large currency depreciations.
...and the Korean Central Bank�s success in maintaining the peg ever since the Thai�s first devaluation (i.e. the �nominal anchor� of the largest of the Asian Tigers was suddenly lost). |
An asset is anything you own that has value (or price) and you can sell. An asset price crisis happens when a common asset many people or institutions own (such as land or stocks) starts to go down suddenly.
In economics, to peg means to fix the value of one thing relative to another (visualize a peg or slender wooden stick poking through one thing to attach it to something else like a peg-board). So, imagine the value of item "B" is pegged to the value of item "A". If the value of A goes up, the value of B goes up. If A goes down, the value of B goes down. It is not uncommon to see a nation with a small economy peg the value of its currency to a larger stronger economy's currency. This may be what the author was talking about. If S. Korea's economy has troubles, other nations' currencies that are pegged to the S. Korean Won will also have trouble. |
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ClarissaMach

Joined: 18 May 2006 Posts: 644 Location: Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
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Posted: Mon Feb 18, 2008 4:01 pm Post subject: |
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Thanks a lot, Bob!!! _________________ Stormy Weather. |
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