Saturday, December 29, 2012

PERU EXPORTS AND IMPORTS IN 2012



                                                PERU EXPORTS


PERU EXPORTS & IMPORTS:


Exports in Peru decreased to 3,822.80 usd. millions in October of 2012 from 4,038.30 usd million in September of  2012.  reported by the banco de reserva del peru

 Imports in Peru increased to 3,787.90 usd. millions in October of  2012 from 3,495.90 usd millions in September of 2012.  reported by the banco de reserva del peru


if you wish to know more about  Peru `s related economy topics:

Peru bank Savings Rate
Peru Balance of Trade
Peru capacity Utilization
Peru Changes in Inventories
Peru Consumer price Index (CPI)
Peru Consumer Spending
Peru Core Consumer prices 

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Saludos Cordiales 

Cesar  M.
Moderator of this blog

DEFINITION OF EXPORTS: 

Exports measure the amount of goods or services that domestic producers provide to foreign consumers by. It is a good that is sent to another country for sale. In the past, export of commercial quantities of goods normally required involvement of the customs authorities in both the country of export and the country of import. More recently, with the advent of small trades over the internet such as through Amazon and e-Bay, exports have largely bypassed the involvement of Customs in many countries due to the low individual values of these trades. Nonetheless, these small exports are still subject to legal restrictions applied by the country of export.





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Thursday, December 20, 2012

Hello everyone, I had created a networking group of LatinAmerican trading for you to review it and participate on,  but before you begin to carry out commercial actions in Latin America you should consider the following: 

1) Get to know the business culture: Latin America is a very attractive market to carry out business and it presents countless opportunities, but NOW IS THE TIME, AN STRONG ECONOMIC GROWTH CONTINUES TO GROW IN LATIN AMERICA FOR THE PAST 20 YEARS. it also presents many obstacles due to its great territorial extension, language, cultural differences, etc. 

2) Relationship building is the crucial: 

It's all about relationships, and more so in Latin America. Latinos like to have the personal contact element, in fact you almost have to build a friendship before you will see a business deal develop. 

The driving force behind any relationship is "confianza" (trust) and unlike in the US, in Latin America "time is not money". GAINING TRUST IS WHERE THINGS GET YOU WANT YOU WANT. WHEN YOU ASSIST ANYONE ELSE TO GET WHAT THEY WANT...! 

Building a relationship with your clients takes time and great connections, requires investments and knowing of the local culture. 

3) Choosing the right path: 

As supplier of products and/or services your company can consider several options to enter to the Latin American market. 

Some of them could be: to establish local operations, to assist the market from their central offices, to be contacted with embassies, or to hire the services from any LATIN AMERICA reliable and trustworthy contact.... LET US KNOW IS YOU NEED SOME ASSISTANCE TO ENTER THIS MARKET. 

SALUDOS CORDIALES...! AND HAPPY HOLIDAYS... 

Cesar Moran 
SKYPE: czrmoran

http://www.facebook.com/TradingWithLatinAmerica

PLEASE BECOME PART OF THIS GROUP, CLICK ON THE LINK ABOVE


IF YOU WISH TO EXPAND WITH OTHERS TRADING PROFESSIONAL CONTACTS  SEND YOUR INFORMATION TO: 
ATTN: CESAR MORAN - EXPORTINGNOW@GMAIL.COM 

Thursday, August 2, 2012

Jim Rogers : I suspect Gold will be much, much, much higher over the next decade

Jim Rogers : I've actually owned goldfor longer than 11 years. I'm not buying now. Gold went up 11 years in a row, which is extremely unusual for any asset. I don't know of any asset in history that's gone up 11 years in a row without a correction. Corrections are normal and are the way things should work, the way things do work. Having said that, I don't know when the correction will stop. It's normal in my experience for corrections to go down 30 or 40%. It's just the way markets work. Gold has not gone down that much. It's only gone down that much once in the past 11 years, and even then it ended the year up. I'm not buying gold at the moment. If it goes down a lot, I hope I'm smart enough to buy a lot more. I'm certainly not selling my gold, because I suspect gold will be much, much, much higher over the next decade.



GOLD/SILVER AT GREAT DISCOUNTS DIRECT FROM THE OPERATING PRODUCER, SEND EMAILS TO: info@mineraperu.com

OR CALL IN THE U.S. 1-703-337-6345 / IN PERU 511-979-332-780 FOR INFO ASK FOR CESAR MORAN - DIRECTOR

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Peru, Colombia & Chile to outshine Brazil on growth this year

The economies of Peru, Colombia and Chile grew more than twice as fast as Brazil last year and are expected to outpace it again in 2012, according to an international report.
The report prepared by Reuters notes that swift growth by these three Andean countries has put renewed focus on regional heavyweight Brazil, whose relatively closed, high-tax economy is now sputtering below its potential.
Brazil has also lagged its peers in the BRIC club of emerging market heavyweights that includes China, India and Russia, it adds.



Officials in the Andean countries say they have benefited from low public debt loads, fiscal surpluses that allow them to invest heavily, and an aggressive pursuit of free-trade deals with big countries that have made their economies among the most open in the world.
In Brazil, politics have at times stymied ambitious fiscal reforms to eliminate the deficit in a country with powerful public sector unions.

Most economists now say Brazil will grow only around 3.3 per cent this year. Peru expects to grow up to six per cent and Colombia is so confident of its expansion that the central bank has been boldly raising interest rates.
“In open economies like Peru there are fewer market distortions, unlike economies which tend to close themselves and create new artificial barriers,” Peruvian Finance Minister Luis Miguel Castilla said in Montevideo. “That also means the capacity of companies in open economies to adapt in a context of international competition is much greater.’

Thursday, March 8, 2012

Peruvians Eduardo Hochschild and Carlos Rodriguez-Pastor both made it onto Forbes’ 2012 World’s Billionaire List.

Hochschild ranks 578, with a net worth of $2.2 billion. The magazine remarks that Hochschild’s source of wealth is mainly from his inheritance and from his family’s mining and cement businesses.
Hochschild Mining trades on the London Stock Exchange, and has mining operations in Mexico, Argentina and Peru.

Forbes’ also mentions his other company, Cementos Pacasmayo, one of Peru’s largest publicly traded cement companies, which recently listed its shares on the New York Stock Exchange.
Rodriguez-Pastor ranks 634 on the list, with an estimated net worth of $2 billion. The magazine says Rodriguez-Pastor “has created an empire that spans anything a consumer could never need in his birth nation.”
Rodriguez-Pastor is chairman of IFH Peru, which is present in virtually all areas of the country's banking sector, owns supermarket chains, fast food restaurants, movie theatres, real estate firms, pharmacies, and financial services companies.

Mexico’s Carlos Slim, with a $69 billion net worth, heads Forbes’ 2012 World’s Billionaire List, followed by Microsoft founder Bill Gates with $61 billion, and Berkshire Hathaway CEO, Warren Buffet with $44 billion.

Cesar Moran - exportingnow@gmail.com

The amount of Peruvian millionaires continues to increase

Reported by Gestión.

In December 2011, there were 1,577 people with deposits that exceeded one million soles, higher than the 1,464 in 2010, according to data from SBS. The total number of wealth from these 1,577 is over 4.9 billion soles- 16.5 percent higher than in 2010.

"The number of new rich, wealth being generated at all levels, grows much faster than in other parts of the world, something similar to what happens in Asia", said José Goldszmidt, director of BBVA Global Markets for Latin America, to Gestión.

Goldszmidt said this trend was not unique to Peru, adding that it was also seen in other Latin American countries such as Chile, Colombia, and Mexico, driven by sustained GDP growth. "There is a direct relationship between GDP and wealth.”

"The amount of money being saved in Peru and Latin America, pension funds, mutual funds, family office and banks is very strong. The savings are related to the wealth generated,”

CESAR MORAN - exportingnow@gmail.com