Más Información

Identifican al sospechoso del tiroteo cerca de la Casa Blanca; medios de EU señalan que es de origen afgano

Desaparecen dos elementos de Harfuch en Jalisco; localizan vehículo en Zapopan y despliegan búsqueda

Luisa Alcalde reacciona a denuncia de panistas ante la CIDH; fueron a “arrodillarse ante el extranjero”, dice

Supercomputadora Coatlicue, ¿cómo será, dónde estará y cuál será su uso en México?; anuncian inversión inicial de 6 mil mdp

Cuauhtémoc Blanco niega misoginia tras lanzar beso a diputada; “no tuvo intención ofensiva ni de menosprecio”, sostiene

VIDEO Camión de refrescos pierde el control y se estrella contra vivienda en Álvaro Obregón; dos adultos mayores resultan lesionados
Markets have exaggerated Mexico's dependence on the price of oil, sending the peso to a series of record lows, Alejandro Werner, director for the Western Hemisphere Department at the International Monetary Fund said on Friday.
Mexico's currency has tumbled 7 percent this year, hit by a collapse in international oil prices that have reached 13-year lows.
Werner said Mexico is "clearly" no longer primarily an oil-producing country, as net exports of the commodity are low and government reliance on its sale has declined.
"Markets are exaggerating Mexico's dependence on oil prices" Werner said in a press conference in Washington broadcast on the Internet. "We are seeing some market overreaction to oil price moves."
Last November, Mexico exported US$1.6 billion in exports of crude oil and refined oil products, a tiny fraction of that month's total US$31 billion in exports, according to the government's statistical agency INEGI.
The IMF expects Mexico's economy, Latin America's second largest, to have grown by 2.5 percent last year, above the 2.25 percent notched in 2014. The fund sees Mexican growth reaching 2.6 percent in 2016.
Noticias según tus intereses
[Publicidad]
[Publicidad]








