Showing posts with label Argentina. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Argentina. Show all posts

2018-08-18

Tech Review: 1) Collapsing Chinese Tech Stocks, 2) Tesla Turbulence

graphic "Tech Review" ©2017 DomainMondo.com
Tech Review (TR 2018-08-18)--Domain Mondo's weekly review of tech investing news with commentary, analysis and opinion: Features • 1) Tencent & Other Collapsing Chinese Tech Stocks, 2) Tesla $TSLA Turbulence, 3) Investing: The Week, Investing Notes, 4) ICYMI Tech News: Facebook, What's Next and more.

1) Tencent & Other Collapsing Chinese Tech Stocks 
Falls from recent highs in 2018 as of August 15, 2018:
  • Tencent -27%  HK: 0700
  • Alibaba Group -21% NYSE: BABA
  • Baidu -23% NASDAQ: BIDU
  • Xiaomi -23% HK: 1810
  • HUYA -45% NYSE: HUYA
Aspects of Tencent stock fall 'attributed' to power politics in China

CNBC Life video published Aug 16, 2018: Gavin Parry, managing director at Parry Global Group (parry-group.com), discusses Tencent's latest surprising earnings report.

See also:
  • Alibaba $BABA: "In the best-case scenario, Alibaba is the goofiest, most convoluted, opaque, mismanaged accounting mess and business structure in history"--deep-throat-ipo.blogspot.com. See the Form 20-F.

2) Tesla $TSLA Turbulence
$TSLA
Elon Musk Details ‘Excruciating’ Personal Toll of Tesla Turmoil | NYTimes.com 16 Aug 2018.

Tesla shares are getting slammed after Elon Musk's off-kilter interview with the NYT | CNBC.com 17 Aug 2018.

Elon Musk's 2018: Tesla, Flamethrowers and Lots of Tweets

Wall Street Journal (wsj.com) video above published Aug 15, 2018: Elon Musk's market-moving tweet about possibly taking Tesla private is just the latest erratic move in a tumultuous year for the CEO. See also: Tesla Is Said to Be Subpoenaed by S.E.C. Over Elon Musk Tweet | NYTimes.com 15 Aug 2018.

3) Investing
graphic: "INVESTING"  ©2017 DomainMondo.com
The Week: Dow, S&P 500 end the day and week higher buttressed by optimism over China-U.S. trade talks | MarketWatch.com.

Week ending 17 Aug 2018: NASDAQ Composite -0.3% | S&P 500 Index +0.6% | DJIA +1.4%

Wall Street's Charging Bull
graphic of Charging Bull | DomainMondo.com
Investing Notes: A Squeeze Is On

a. Grand Collapse in Turkey; to avoid the same fate, Argentina hikes rate to 45% | WolfStreet.com.

b. Rise of US Dollar Haunts Emerging Market Debt | WolfStreet.com 14 Aug 2018.

c. Tech still all the rage while bears prowl emerging markets: BAML survey | reuters.com.

d. Chinese banks’ bad loans grow at record pace in second quarter | chinaeconomicreview.com.

4) ICYMI Tech News:
graphic: "ICYMI Tech News" ©2017 DomainMondo.com
Facebook: what's next?

FT.com video above published 16 Aug 2018: After Facebook's share price $FB plunge, what's next for the social network? The FT's Hannah Kuchler posts from shareholder, advertiser and user perspectives.
  • AI & Fintech: how artificial intelligence is transforming financial services--weforum.org.

-- John Poole, Editor, Domain Mondo  

feedback & comments via twitter @DomainMondo


DISCLAIMER

2018-06-06

MacroView: US Trade Policy and US Interest Rates Impact Global Markets

US may prefer separate trade deals with Canada and Mexico

Financial Times (ft.com) video above published Jun 4, 2018: US President Donald Trump says he may prefer separate trade deals with Canada and Mexico rather than the North America Free Trade Agreement.

Editor's note: various factors may be differentiating the U.S. from global markets affected  by the Trump trade policy and Federal Reserve rate hikes--“The economic effect of a global trade war may be worse on Europe, Japan and China than they are on the U.S., and global equity investors have to put their money somewhere”--Why tech stocks give ‘an insulating force field’ to this market | MarketWatch.com: "The trade uncertainty also has helped squelch the 10-year Treasury yield supporting equities [U.S. stocks], according to Colas. And his fourth factor is that we [U.S.] might weather whatever comes better than other countries do."

Raghuram Rajan Says The U.S. Federal Reserve Will Stick To Its Pace Of Rate Of Hikes

BloombergQuint video published Jun 4, 2018: Former Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Governor Raghuram Rajan* on emerging markets, U.S. Fed Reserve hikes and more: "unfortunately accidents can happen ... my worry is what you may think of as bargaining employees working out the art of the deal soon becomes hardened positions which become very difficult to back off and then you enter actual conflagration and that combined with the high degree of leverage and asset prices which are you know price to perfection that's the potent volatile combination."

*Dr. Rajan is currently the Katherine Dusak Miller Distinguished Service Professor of Finance at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business. He received his PhD from the MIT Sloan School of Management (1991).

He was the 23rd Governor of the Reserve Bank of India between September 2013 and September 2016. Between 2003 and 2006, Rajan was the Chief Economist and Director of Research at the International Monetary Fund. In 2015, during his tenure at the Indian Reserve Bank he also became Vice-Chairman of the Bank for International Settlements.

At the Federal Reserve annual Jackson Hole conference in 2005, Rajan warned about the growing risks in the financial system and proposed policies that would reduce such risks. Former U.S. Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers called the warnings "misguided" and Rajan himself a "luddite". However, following the 2008 economic crisis, Rajan's views came to be seen as prescient and he was extensively interviewed for the Oscar-winning documentary Inside Job (2010).

Transcript (auto-generated)
00:00 [higher US interest rates] is my guess
00:03 unless something really untoward happens
00:05 in the global economy or in the US
00:08 economy which in the U.S. certainly
00:10 there's no sign that something is bad is
00:12 going to happen we will have a couple
00:15 more rate hikes after which the Fed will
00:18 look around and see well are we getting
00:20 close so round two point seven five [2.75] --
00:22 three [3.0] is approximately where it will
00:24 stop maybe one more next year and and
00:26 perhaps pause at that point say we're
00:28 closer to neutral than before and maybe
00:31 we have to see the consequences because
00:32 monetary policy has lags we've seen
00:36 around recently in emerging markets and
00:39 your successor Dr. Patel has come out
00:42 to say that you know the tapering pace
00:44 of the Fed is to blame for what receive
00:47 recently do you agree with the view well
00:49 I don't know that
00:53 these the liquidity in the financial
00:56 markets has disappeared as of now I
00:59 think Dr. Patel is raising a question
01:03 about going forward if there is a
01:04 substantial withdrawal of liquidity
01:06 whether in fact it causes markets to
01:09 tighten overly but my guess at this
01:11 point is the U.S. is focused on growth
01:15 of itse domestic economy and thinks that
01:18 inflation is pretty much where it wants
01:20 it to be and with labor markets below
01:23 what it thinks is consistent with full
01:25 employment that is at three point seven
01:28 this is a historic low [unemployment] that really
01:31 they're focused inwardly and unless
01:33 there's something big outside that
01:35 happens to knock them knock their sense
01:38 of what is going to happen in the US you
01:52 know you know in a world where countries
01:55 take full cognizance of the
01:56 international responsibilities one of
01:59 the things that I have been pressing for
02:01 is really the sense that the big central
02:04 banks should look at the consequences of
02:06 their actions also on other countries
02:08 that said I think emerging markets are
02:11in a much better situation today with a
02:14 few exceptions where you know finances
02:16 as well as politics or creating some
02:19 uncertainty amongst international
02:21 investors but I think broadly they're in
02:23 a much better situation than they were
02:25 say around
02:26 time of the people tantrum that is not
02:28 to say accidents cannot happen that's
02:30 agreed with a view of Jerome Powell who
02:32 said that emerging markets are in a good
02:35 position to navigate the shifts in US
02:37 policy when you talk about they are
02:39 exceptions which countries I would say
02:43 they're in a better position I think
02:45 there will be still stress for the
02:47 emerging markets and they will have to
02:48 cope with the rising dollar as well as
02:50 rising international interest rates as
02:52 well as the flow back of capital flows
02:55 which always happens at times like this
02:57 so there will be stresses of course if
03:00 you look around the world and you ask
03:01 which countries are already stressed you
03:03 would say Argentina is stressed and of
03:06 course Turkey is undergoing some stress
03:08 the central bank has raised interest
03:10 rates considerably as well as simplified
03:12 the interest rate structure I think in
03:15 countries looking forward because Italy
03:18 depending on what the government does
03:20 and how much it wants to break the
03:22 fiscal constraints that the [European] Union puts
03:26 on it and the euro area that's going to
03:29 be a place to watch Brazil where
03:31 elections are coming up and of course
03:34 Brazil has a medium-term fiscal problem
03:36 which needs to resolve by dealing
03:39 primarily with the pensions of public
03:42 sector employees that is going to face
03:44 the next presidents not going to happen
03:45 before there's going to be something the
03:47 next president will have to opine on
03:48 very quickly and that's something to
03:50 watch out for so there are countries
03:53 issues that they have to deal with as we
03:56 go forward
03:56 you didn't mention any of the emerging
03:58 markets in Asia well I think Asian
04:00 emerging markets are in a healthier
04:03 situation than in the past because of
04:06 fairly narrow current account deficits
04:10 very small fiscal deficits as well as
04:13 moderate inflation so there is more
04:16 confidence their currencies many of them
04:18 have moved to inflation targeting
04:19 regimes and there is a sense that you
04:22 know they're not gonna let inflation get
04:24 out of control so they are in a
04:26 different position again I would say
04:28 that Southen can get stressed at this
04:31 point I would say you know amongst the
04:34 big ones no clear and present danger you
04:37 talked about Italy and we saw the fall
04:39 out of Italy throughout the world
04:41 two months ago I met chief Christine
04:44 Lagarde did say that she was confident
04:46 the eurozone was on a sustainable path
04:48 of growth does Italy changed prospects
04:51 for eurozone well I think certainly the
04:54 advent of a populist government in Italy
04:57 we'll raise the questions that have been
04:59 raised and have been sort of have quiet
05:01 down which is what is the periphery
05:03 getting now in truth the periphery has
05:06 got a lot in terms of inheriting
05:09 credible monetary policy much lower
05:12 interest rates than they were used to
05:13 but at this point in a relative sense
05:16 when they look at the past they feel
05:20 that the exchange rate is stronger than
05:22 they would like and the benefits of low
05:25 interest rates are being subverted to
05:27 some extent by fears about the these
05:31 countries and the spreads are widening
05:34 so on the one hand we don't have as
05:36 flexible and exchange rate as we would
05:38 want on the other hand interest rates
05:40 are higher for us than we would like
05:42 relative to what they were in the past
05:45 and so our [Italian] firms are paying these higher
05:47 interest rates are not being able to
05:49 match competition from say Germany or
05:52 the Netherlands and so the core
05:54 periphery sort of divide is growing
05:57 again
05:57 I mean there is a dialogue to be had but
06:01 it is going to be a tough one
06:02 Italy is one challenge the other
06:04 challenge is trade US and after US and
06:08 China and of course US and its US steel
06:12 and aluminium tariffs is Asia most at
06:16 risk when it comes to concern about
06:18 protectionism well unfortunately
06:20 accidents can happen
06:22 and the world is not well prepared for
06:25 the entity at the center of the global
06:28 financial and monetary order and trade
06:31 order turning around and saying I don't
06:33 believe in all this I want to change
06:35 things now the system has been built by
06:38 the U.S. around the U.S.. and now the
06:40 U.S. actually doesn't believe in using
06:43 the multilateral system this is a very
06:46 big change and we're not prepared for it
06:48 now you would hope that good sense
06:51 prevails and some of what we see are
06:53 bargaining tactics rather than actual
06:57 threats which should be carried out the
06:59 problem of course is positions hardened
07:01 you make a threat somebody else makes
07:04 the counter threat soon you find you
07:06 cannot back off and then we get into
07:08 this is true of war it's true of trade
07:11 war and one of the big worries is that
07:13 threat something made left right and
07:15 center by so strong I would say largely
07:20 been strong men who want to be seen as
07:23 strong and the rule to back off is far
07:28 more limited
07:29 and every country with a democratic or
07:31 authoritarian essentially the
07:34 governments want to look strong so my
07:36 worry is what you may think of as
07:40 bargaining employees working out the art
07:43 of the deal soon becomes hardened
07:46 positions which become very difficult to
07:49 back off and then you enter actual
07:52 conflagration and that combined with the
07:55 high degree of leverage and asset prices
07:59 which are you know price to perfection
08:01 that's the potent volatile combination


feedback & comments via twitter @DomainMondo


DISCLAIMER

2016-02-19

GAC Members Minority Statement on ICANN Accountability WS1 Proposal

UPDATE February 26, 2016: Updated Minority Statements--Following the publication of the CCWG-Accountability Final Report and its distribution to the Chartering Organizations, those five members of CCWG who had submitted minority statements [available separately here] were given the opportunity to submit revise minority statements. All minority statements are now in Appendix A  (pdf)--embedded below–"Documenting Process of Building Consensus" of the Final Report, including that of GAC member Olga Cavalli, whose minority statement is now supported by 16 governments:
Argentina, Benin, Brazil, Chile, Commonwealth of Dominica, France, Guinea, Mali, Nigeria, Paraguay, Peru, Portugal, Russian Federation, The Democratic Republic of Congo, Uruguay, Venezuela:



--end of update--
"Does this [the GAC members' minority statement below] constitute an objectionMy understanding is that only objections can be accompanied by a minority opinion. As the GAC works by consensus, I assume it means the GAC objects. Given Ms Gross Minority statement, it follows she objects. I have objected formally as well and have sent a Minority StatementCan the Co-Chairs please declare non-consensus so we can all get on with our lives? Not only would it be cost saving..." --Dr Eberhard W Lisse, Thu Feb 18 19:35:55 UTC 2016, CCWG member (emphasis and link added)
A few CCWG-Accountability members have filed minority statements in dissent to the CCWG-Accountability Work Stream 1 final proposal now scheduled for final approval at ICANN55 in Marrakech, March 5-10, including a CCWG member appointed by GAC, who filed a minority statement on behalf of nine governments:

[CCWG-ACCT] Updated Minority Statement for the CCWG-Accountability Supplemental Final Proposal on Work Stream 1 Recommendations Thu Feb 18 16:39:44 UTC 2016:

"As a member of the CCWG on Accountability appointed by the GAC [Governmental Advisory Committee], and on behalf of the governments of:
Argentina
Brazil
Chile
France
Paraguay
Peru
Portugal
Uruguay
Venezuela

"I am submitting an updated verision of the Minority Statement which I sent yesterday..."
 [revised text of minority statement in embed below and here (pdf)]

Best regards
Olga Cavalli
Argentina GAC Representative
GAC Vicechair



Others also filing minority statements:

UPDATE: Minority statement also filed by ALAC Member Tijani Ben Jemaa: a) "I would like to express my strong opposition to removing the entire board by a decision taken by only 3 SO/ACs under any circumstance ..." (pdf) and b)  "I would like to make this minority statement regarding
Recommendation 6 (Human Rights) - I express my opposition to replacing “within its mission” in the beginning of the proposed text by “within its core value”..." (pdf)

[CCWG-ACCT] Minority Statement of Individual Member Robin Gross (pdf): ".... "The CCWG-Accountability proposal includes a number of important and long over-due accountability reforms including improvements to ICANN’s Independent Review Process (IRP), Reconsideration Request process, board removal rights, and a noteworthy bylaws commitment to respect human rights in ICANN’s operation, among other truly laudable accountability reform measures. However, the long-term harm to a free and open Internet from the proposal’s shifting the traditional balance of power over ICANN in favor of governments and away from the Supporting Organizations and the private sector is a monumental mistake."

[CCWG-ACCT] Appendix H - ASO Minority Statement: "... ASO, we would like to make a minority statement below, not on the recommendations but on "Appendix H: Bylaws Drafting Process & Implementation Timeline". Our statement is related to bylaws drafting process & implementation timeline, and not directly related to contents of the recommendations ..."

*Note: only appointed members (not participants) were permitted to file minority statements. All filed minority statements are in Appendix A (pdf) to the final proposal.

The members of the CCWG-Accountability:

ALAC
Sebastien Bachollet (Europe)
Tijani Ben Jemaa (Africa)
Alan Greenberg (North America)
Cheryl Langdon-Orr (Asia/Asia Pacific)
León Sanchez (Latin America) – Co-Chair

ASO
Fiona Asonga
Athina Fragkouli
Izumi Okutani
Jorge Villa

ccNSO
Jordan Carter (.NZ, AP Region)
Eberhard Lisse (.NA, African Region)
Roelof Meijer (.NL, European Region)
Giovanni Seppia (.EU, European Region)
Mathieu Weill (.FR, European Region) – Co-Chair

GAC
Par Brumark (Niue)
Olga Cavalli (Agentina)
Alice Munyua (African Union Commission)
Suzanne Radell (USA)
Julia Wolman (Denmark)

GNSO
James Bladel (RrSG, North America Region)
Becky Burr (RySG, North America Region)
Steve DelBianco (CSG, North America Region)
Robin Gross (NCSG, North America Region)
Thomas Rickert (GNSO Council, Europe Region) – Co-Chair

SSAC
Lyman Chapin
Julie Hammer

Others
Bruce Tonkin (ICANN Board Liaison)
Samantha Eisner (ICANN Staff Representative)

For more information on CCWG-Accountability WS1 final proposal, see Domain Mondo: IANA Stewardship Transition, New ICANN CCWG Accountability Timeline.




DISCLAIMER

2015-10-23

ICANN Lobbying, Conflicts, Ethics, Transparency, Accountability, Disclosure

The word "lobbying" was used 22 times yesterday at the ICANN 54 Public Forum in Dublin, Ireland--the first 3 times in the question asked via email by the editor of Domain Mondo. The next 10 times in interchanges between Kieren McCarthy and ICANN CEO Fadi Chehade. The video of the Public Forum and the transcript excerpts of the above are at the Domain Mondo post: ICANN 54 Public Forum Video, Q&A, ICANN, INTA, IANA, Lobbyists.

The final 9 uses of the word "lobbying" were by Rick Lane, Sr. Vice President Government Affairs at 21st Century Fox, and member of the ICANN Business Constituency, who spoke in response to Fadi's "give and take about lobbying" referenced above [Lane starts @03:34:46 on the livestream video here] (emphasis added)

Thank you. My name is Rick Lane I’m with 21st Century Fox. I wanted to respond to Fadi's give and take about lobbying and he's factually accurate which is there are definitions of what is lobbying. The Lobbying Disclosure Act [LDA] has a very narrow definition. And the money you report is very limited to your actual lobbying of Capitol Hill. Also requires that you lobby on -- you list what issues you have lobbied on. So the IANA transition. But then it's very broad in who you lobbied. House, Senate, NTIA, Department of Commerce. The next one that he showed was the tax form. Tax form is much broader. Includes grass-roots lobbying, so if you're trying to get other groups to join you and you're paying those groups. Also includes state lobbying.

The third one is the Foreign Agents Registration Act. That's the one that the U.S. uses where if you are representing a foreign government in front of the U.S. Congress or any agencies, you have to file with the Justice Department. The reason for that is that the Justice Department and Congress and American people want to know if there is undue influence by foreign governments on the U.S. Congress. Those filings are very detailed. They include who you met with, how much money you spent on expenditures, what you talked about, and I think that's what this community is more looking for. Not the LDA or your -- your tax because those are just dollar amounts. They're not really meaningful. What's really meaningful is what were the issues discussed? What were the resources? And the other important thing to know is those filings are only U.S. centric. And ICANN has told us over and over they are about the world. And we like that. So if you're only filing about what you're doing in the U.S., what about meetings in China, Brazil, Argentina? Anyplace else in the world that doesn't have by their federal laws the requirements to register lobbyists or require those expenditures.

So I think what we're asking and the B.C. asked this in its recent filing [timer sounds ] that we want to add an additional bylaw that requires ICANN or any individual acting on ICANN's behalf to make periodic public disclosures of their contacts with any government official as well as activities, receipts, and disbursements in support of those activities. Disclosure of those would enable the entire community to evaluate the statements and activities of such persons in their role as representing ICANN and in fact the ICANN community. So the answers were very narrow that Fadi gave about U.S. lobbying law, which I'm in charge of our lobbying ethics and lobbying filings so I know them very well. But we're talking very broad.

Wolfgang Kleinwachter: I think your point is clear and Steve [Crocker, ICANN Board Chairman] will react.

Steve Crocker: Thank you. Thank you very much for your speech. We’ll look into this.

Rick Lane: And hopefully it's part of Work Stream 1 and included as part of the bylaws. Thank you.

Fadi Chehade: Sorry, if I may just clarify, we do not have lobbyists that we don't disclose. Period. Let’s just be very clear. Any lobbyist we pay is disclosed.

Right but --

Fadi Chehade: all the lobbyists we have in the U.S. --

Steve Crocker: Fadi --

Fadi Chehade: This is an important point because there's a definition of lobbyists but it's not people who influence outside of the U.S.

Steve Crocker: Stop. Please stop.

Fadi Chehade: This is actually wrong.

Steve Crocker: Please stop. Thank you.

Wolfgang Kleinwachter: By the way, your speech is on the record so it means everybody can read it.



Methinks Fadi doth protest too much--what's ICANN CEO Fadi Chehade trying to hide? 




DISCLAIMER

2015-06-25

ICANN 53, Thursday: CEO Succession, Public Forum, Board Meeting

Thursday, June 25, 2015, at ICANN 53, Buenos Aires, Argentina: Twitter Feeds
Thursday at ICANN 53: The full daily schedule is shown below. For online or remote participation for each session on Thursday, follow the session links. Highlights for Thursday include:
  • CEO Succession Process 11:45 AM EDT (US) (LIVESTREAM link below)
  • Public Forum ICANN 1 PM EDT (US) (LIVESTREAM link below)
  • Board of Directors Meeting 4:30 PM EDT (US) (LIVESTREAM link Below)
Thursday, 25 June 2015 - Full Schedule:
06:45 to 11:30 ART Fellowship Morning Meeting Catalinas
07:00 to 08:00 ART GNSO Non-PDP Data & Metrics for Policy Making Retiro B
07:00 to 08:30 ART ALAC and Regional Leadership Wrap-Up Session I Golden Horn
08:00 to 09:00 ART SSAC Public Meeting Auditorio
08:30 to 09:45 ART Contractual Compliance Registrar Outreach [C] Golden Horn
08:30 to 10:00 ART CWG-Stewardship Working Session La Pampa
08:30 to 12:30 ART GAC Meetings - Thursday 25 June San Telmo
08:30 to 12:30 ART ICG Working Session 3 Libertador AB
08:45 to 10:00 ART Registry Operator Roundtable Retiro A
10:00 to 11:30 ART APAC Space Retiro B
10:15 to 11:30 ART Contractual Compliance Registry Outreach [C] Golden Horn
10:15 to 11:45 ART CCWG-Accountability Working Session 3 La Pampa
11:45 to 12:45 ART ALAC and Regional Leadership Wrap-Up Session II Golden Horn
11:45 to 12:45 ART GNSO Wrap-Up Session Retiro B

12:45 to 13:45 ART CEO Succession Process Libertador AB
14:00 to 17:30 ART ICANN Public Forum Libertador AB
17:30 to 18:30 ART ICANN Public Board Meeting Libertador AB



2015-06-22

ICANN 53 Opening Session, IANA Transition, Accountability Sessions (video / links)

Monday, June 22, 2015, at ICANN 53, Buenos Aires, Argentina:
ICANN53 Buenos Aires (Official ICANN 53 website)



2015-05-14

Going to Buenos Aires for ICANN 53? US Gov Travel Advisory

Going to Buenos Aires for ICANN 53 (June 21-25, 2015)? Domain Mondo strongly reccommends you review and bookmark the US Department of State web pages below [travelers to ICANN 53 from other nations should also review their own national government sources and this ICANN page]:

US Department of State web pages:
Argentinahttp://www.travel.state.gov/content/passports/english/country/argentina.html

Travel Information | Embassy of the United States:
http://argentina.usembassy.gov/warden_messages.html

Excerpts:

TOURIST VISA not required for stays of 90 days or less. However, prior to arrival in Argentina, U.S. citizen tourist and business travelers must pay a $160 reciprocity fee. [NOTE: Citizens from countries that have to pay a Reciprocity Fee must pay it in their own country. Payment on Argentinean airports is no longer available.]

Argentine law requires that, prior to arrival in Argentina at any entry point, U.S. citizen tourist and business travelers pay a 160 USD reciprocity fee by credit card online at the Provincia Pagos website. For English instructions, check Online Payment brocuhure. Once paid, travelers must print out the receipt and present it to the Argentine immigration officer at the time of entry. The fee is valid for 10 years from the date of payment and for multiple entries. It is advisable to keep multiple copies of the receipt, as it must be presented every time you enter Argentina. The fee applies only to bearers of tourist passports. Travelers bearing diplomatic or official passports are required to get visas prior to arrival in Argentina but are not charged the reciprocity fee, nor are travelers transiting and not entering Argentina.

WOMEN TRAVELER INFORMATION ... travel tips for Women Travelers.

SAFETY and SECURITY: ... in Buenos Aires, where violent robberies have been occurring with increasing frequency. While crime can occur at all times of day, tourists who go to La Boca should limit their visits to the designated tourist street during daylight hours only... A number of scams involving yellow and black taxis have been reported at international airports and around Buenos Aires. The most frequently reported scams include a “handler” at the airport requesting hundreds of pesos (an amount that far exceeds the likely fare) from the traveler as s/he gets into the cab. The traveler assumes s/he is paying a flat rate up front. When the cab ride is finished, the driver demands the ride fare stating to have no association with the handler at the airport and that the fee paid was to get placed in the cab. Another version of the scam involves the taxi breaking down on the side of the freeway and another cab coming to retrieve the passenger. The first driver demands payment for the whole fare to the destination, as does the second driver who completes the trip. To avoid these potential issues, either pre-arrange transportation or select one of the flat rate “remise” services located inside the airport terminal. In town, radio taxis from a reliable location, such as a hotel, should be utilized whenever possible. After dark, radio taxis or private “remise” taxis should be called from a reliable location. Criminals usually work in groups, and travelers should assume criminals are armed. Criminals employ a variety of ruses to distract and victimize unsuspecting visitors. Be suspicious of anyone who approaches you on the street. A common scam is to spray mustard or another substance on the tourist from a distance. A pickpocket will then approach the tourist offering to help clean the stain, and while doing so, s/he or an accomplice robs the victim. Another scam is to entice tourists into a bar known as a “wiskeria” with a flyer for a shopping discount or free show. Once inside, the victim is not allowed to leave until s/he pays an exorbitant amount for a drink. In other scenarios, criminals use the excuse of handing out the flyers to approach victims and rob them. Thieves on foot and motorcycles, “motochorros,” regularly nab purses, backpacks, laptops, and luggage, and criminals will often distract visitors for a few seconds to steal valuables. If traveling in a car, keep windows up and valuables in the trunk or on the floor boards. Do not place handbags on the back of your chair or on the floor at a restaurant; instead, keep them in your lap. While most U.S. citizens are not physically injured when robbed, criminals may be armed and are known to use force when they encounter resistance. There have been violent and even fatal attacks on foreigners carrying valuables such as expensive cameras and equipment. Visitors are advised to immediately hand over all cash and valuables if confronted. Thieves may target visitors wearing expensive watches or jewelry, or carrying laptop computer cases. When staying in a hotel or apartment, it is a good precaution to call the front desk or security to identify uninvited individuals before giving them access. There have been a small number of reports of the use of date rape drugs in bars. Travelers should use caution entering and exiting financial institutions and when using ATM machines. Thieves have been known to target persons coming in and out of these locations. Some travelers have received counterfeit currency in Argentina. Unscrupulous vendors and taxi drivers sometimes pretend to help tourists review their pesos and then trade bad bills for good ones. Characteristics of good currency can be reviewed at the Argentine Central Bank website.

Along with conventional muggings, "express kidnappings" occur. Victims are grabbed off of the street or stopped in mobile vehicle road blocks based on their appearance and vulnerability. In some scenarios, they are forced to withdraw as much money as possible from ATM machines, and then their family or co-workers are contacted and told to deliver all the cash that they have on hand or can gather in a couple of hours. Once the ransom is paid, the victim is usually quickly released unharmed. There have been some foreign victims of express kidnappings. Visitors are particularly advised not to let children and adolescents travel alone. Virtual kidnappings (fake telephone kidnappings) are common. Criminals use stolen phones or otherwise obtained personal data to contact family members and co-workers claiming to have kidnapped the owner of the phone. This has happened while the alleged kidnapping victim is in the movie theater, on an international flight, or when a cell phone has just been stolen. Memorizing important phone numbers and if robbed immediately finding a phone and letting family members know you are alright are critical to interrupting this cycle.

Travelers worldwide are advised to avoid packing valuables in their checked baggage. In Argentina, officials have publicly acknowledged the systematic theft of valuables and money from checked baggage at Buenos Aires airports. Travelers should exercise continued care and caution....

Your passport is a valuable document and should be guarded. Passports and other valuables should be locked in a hotel safe, and a photocopy of your passport should be carried for identification purposes. The U.S. Embassy has observed an increase in reports of stolen passports.

VICTIMS OF CRIME: Countrywide - To report emergencies, contact the police, an ambulance, or the fire department by dialing 911 from any phone except in Cordoba, Mendoza, Iguazu, Tucuman, and Tierra del Fuego provinces, in which you need to dial 101 for emergency services.

If you or someone you know becomes the victim of a crime abroad, you should contact the local police and the nearest U.S. embassy or consulate [see below]....

The Argentine Federal Police have established a Tourist Police Unit to receive complaints and investigate crimes against tourists. The unit, located at Corrientes 436 in Buenos Aires, responds to calls around the clock at 4346-5748 or toll-free 0800-999-5000 from anywhere in the country....

... Demonstrations are common in metropolitan Buenos Aires ... Protesters on occasion block streets, highways, and major intersections, causing traffic jams and delaying travel. While demonstrations are usually nonviolent, some individuals break from larger groups and sometimes seek confrontation with the police and vandalize private property. Groups occasionally protest in front of the U.S. Embassy and U.S.-affiliated businesses. U.S. citizens should take common-sense precautions and avoid gatherings or any other event where crowds congregate to protest.... 

Currency: ... banks and exchange houses in Argentina reportedly have been refusing to sell dollars and other foreign currencies to foreign citizens in exchange for pesos unless the foreign traveler is able to present original receipt(s) showing the purchase of pesos. ...

Health: ...Most travelers to Argentina need to have only their routine U.S. recommended immunizations updated. The one additional recommended vaccine for all travelers is Hepatitis A...

TRAFFIC SAFETY AND ROAD CONDITIONS: While in Argentina, you may encounter road conditions that differ significantly from those in the United States. Driving in Argentina is generally more dangerous than driving in the United States. By comparison, drivers in Argentina tend to be aggressive, especially in Buenos Aires, and often ignore traffic regulations. An Argentine or international driving permit is required to drive in Argentina, but please verify with local authorities for the most current information...

CRIMINAL PENALTIES: While you are traveling in Argentina, you are subject to its laws even if you are a U.S. citizen. Foreign laws and legal systems can be vastly different than our own. In some places you may be taken in for questioning if you don’t have your passport with you. In some areas, it is illegal to take pictures of certain buildings. Driving under the influence could land you immediately in jail....

U.S. Embassy Buenos Aires
Av. Colombia 4300
(C1425GMN) Buenos Aires
Argentina

Telephone: +(54)(11) 5777-4533
Emergency After-Hours Telephone: +(54)(11) 5777-4873 and during working hours +(54)(11) 5777-4354

Fax: +(54)(11) 5777-4240
BuenosAires-ACS@state.gov


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