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 peso ['peisәu]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 比索

[经] 比索




    peso
    [ noun ]
    1. the basic unit of money in Uruguay; equal to 100 centesimos

    2. <noun.quantity>
    3. the basic unit of money in the Philippines; equal to 100 centavos

    4. <noun.quantity>
    5. the basic unit of money in Mexico; equal to 100 centavos

    6. <noun.quantity>
    7. the basic unit of money in Guinea-Bissau; equal to 100 centavos

    8. <noun.quantity>
    9. the basic unit of money in the Dominican Republic; equal to 100 centavos

    10. <noun.quantity>
    11. the basic unit of money in Cuba; equal to 100 centavos

    12. <noun.quantity>
    13. the basic unit of money in Colombia; equal to 100 centavos

    14. <noun.quantity>
    15. the basic unit of money in Chile; equal to 100 centesimos

    16. <noun.quantity>


    Peso \Pe"so\, n. [Sp.]
    A Spanish dollar; also, an Argentine, Chilian, Colombian,
    etc., coin, equal to from 75 cents to a dollar; also, a pound
    weight.

    1. Reduced oil income also contributed to a drain on foreign reserves currently used to support an anti-inflationary peso currency freeze against the dollar.
    2. Cubans would be encouraged to exchange foreign currency for the new peso, thus putting more of the hard currency in the country under official control. The government has been increasingly concerned at the rapid devaluation of the existing peso.
    3. Cubans would be encouraged to exchange foreign currency for the new peso, thus putting more of the hard currency in the country under official control. The government has been increasingly concerned at the rapid devaluation of the existing peso.
    4. They argued that after the oil-market collapse of January 1986 it wasn't Mr. Salinas who changed, but Mexican central bankers who saved the country by ramming through peso devaluation and trade liberalization.
    5. And liabilities are normally of 3-5 years but banks' peso assets are beginning to stretch out for much longer. Bad loans are increasing fast.
    6. The peso was quoted in a much smaller range yesterday than on Wednesday, when some exchanges quoted it at far weaker levels.
    7. In fact, they note, the plan has required concessions from, among others, workers whose wages have been frozen and exporters who depend on a weak peso to keep their products competitive.
    8. The peso showed signs of stabilizing after its abrupt fall last week, when Mexico's central bank stopped supporting the currency on the secondary "free" exchange market.
    9. Economic Planning Secretary Solita Monsod said the Central Bank may favor a free-floating exchange rate, but it also intends to make sure that the peso's rate of exchange against the dollar "flows in a smooth and nonviolent manner."
    10. The peso was strengthened after the announcement, and the stock market rose 2 per cent yesterday morning after rallying 3 per cent on Tuesday.
    11. This week the Central Bank had to sell Dollars 108.4m in hard currency, equivalent to 1.6 per cent of its reserves, to support the peso.
    12. A statement released by the president's office Sunday night said the government would maintain its 6-month-old freeze on the peso currency exchange rate and prices for government-regulated goods and services through the end of the administration.
    13. The free-market peso is used in only one-fifth of all currency transactions, mostly by tourists and currency traders along the U.S. border.
    14. Mexico's peso collapsed last week, Brazil is still at odds with its international creditors despite a proposed short-term debt accord, and Argentina nearly ran out of money in the past few weeks.
    15. In fact, there are suspicions that the overvaluation of the peso is not the result of legitimate productive investment.
    16. Next year, there'll be a new Argentine currency, the peso.
    17. But he says that if inflation, reserve requirements and the depreciation of the peso are taken into consideration, "we didn't make anything." It requires some pretty creative math to arrive at that conclusion.
    18. When the collapse of oil prices provoked two steep peso devaluations in 1981 and 1982, the dollars needed to service foreign debt became seven times more expensive.
    19. The devaluation of the peso in the 1960s and again in the 1970s left these same entrepreneurs holding the proverbial "bag."
    20. And devaluation, adding to distrust of the currency, discourages the return of flight capital and new peso investments.
    21. The average Mexican paycheck lost about half its buying power. The austerity affected everything from the peso to pollution _ 95 percent of all cars in Mexico City are more than five years old, most bought before the crash.
    22. Together with Central Bank Governor Jesus Fernandez, he was able to bring down high inflation, stabilizing the peso.
    23. There were also worries about the amount of international reserves available to the central bank to support the peso. 'The government did something it swore it wasn't going to do,' said Mr Felix Boni of the Mexican brokerage firm Interacciones.
    24. Speculation against the peso has prevented the government from pushing down domestic interest rates, so its costs to service the public debt have been higher than expected.
    25. Selling pressure resulted from damage caused by volcanic eruptions, a strike for lower petroleum prices and political squabbling, as well as the overvalued peso, which is causing losses on investments by foreigners.
    26. On top of that, Mexican government officials seem determined to slow the pace of peso devaluations that did exporters so much good last year.
    27. "Nobody gave us a single peso," he said.
    28. The rise in costs caused the operating margin to fall to 41.7 per cent. Financial costs were also up sharply, largely due to the depreciation of nearly 10 per cent of the peso against the US dollar, which led to a reported exchange loss of 978m pesos.
    29. The portfolio investment was fuelled by successful share offerings in Telmex, the privatised telephone company, and huge foreign appetite for other blue-chip Mexican equity and peso denominated debt.
    30. The government, among other things, is considering basing its new budget on a peso exchange rate of 4.5 to the dollar, though it hopes the peso will be stronger.
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