
Maria Elena Vizcaino
Reporter at Bloomberg News
Caraqueña, Miamera, Tar Heel, journalist. Covering emerging markets for @business | raised by @mdcthereporter @dailytarheel. Opinions are my own.
Articles
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3 days ago |
japantimes.co.jp | Matthew Burgess |Maria Elena Vizcaino |Catherine Bosley
After years of coming second to popular Latin American carry trades, Asian currencies are finding their cheapness has become an asset as traders seek to capitalize on the dollar’s eroding premium status. Currencies like South Korea’s won, the Indonesian rupiah, and the Indian rupee rank among the most undervalued in emerging markets relative to their historic average, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
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3 days ago |
bloomberg.com | Catherine Bosley |Matthew Burgess |Maria Elena Vizcaino
South Korean 50,000 won banknotes prepared at the Bank of Korea headquarters. (Bloomberg) -- After years of coming second to popular Latin American carry trades, Asian currencies are finding their cheapness has become an asset as traders seek to capitalize on the dollar’s eroding premium status.
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3 days ago |
nz.finance.yahoo.com | Catherine Bosley |Matthew Burgess |Maria Elena Vizcaino
(Bloomberg) -- After years of coming second to popular Latin American carry trades, Asian currencies are finding their cheapness has become an asset as traders seek to capitalize on the dollar’s eroding premium status. Most Read from Bloomberg Currencies like South Korea’s won, the Indonesian rupiah, and the Indian rupee rank among the most undervalued in emerging markets relative to their historic average, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
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1 week ago |
bloomberg.com | Maria Elena Vizcaino
(Bloomberg) -- Matt Maloney, a partner at Gramercy Funds Management, has left after a decade with the emerging-market focused hedge fund, people familiar with the matter said. Maloney was at the firm until December of last year — most recently as the head of public credit and alternative investments, the people said, requesting anonymity because the information is private. A spokeswoman for Gramercy declined to comment.
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1 week ago |
businessmirror.com.ph | Carter Johnson |Maria Elena Vizcaino
The US dollar got a fresh jolt to start the week as speculation around potential trade deals sparked an extraordinary spike in Taiwan’s currency and reverberated across global foreign exchange markets. Already under pressure as President Donald Trump’s economic agenda dents attitudes around American assets, the greenback weakened further on Monday against most major currencies. A Bloomberg gauge of the dollar wrapped up the session in New York about 0.2% lower after paring earlier declines.
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