Guatemala: dollar closing price today, March 18 USD to GTQ

This is the behavior of the US currency during the last minutes of the day

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In the last session, the US dollar traded at the close of 7.69 quetzals on average, an increase of 2.13% compared to the previous day's figure of 7.53 quetzals on average.

Compared to the last seven days, the US dollar marked a decline of 0.12%, although, on the contrary, for a year it has still maintained a rise of 1.66%. Compared to previous dates, he added four consecutive sessions in positive values. As for the volatility of the last few days, it was notoriously higher than that accumulated in the last year, so it is showing a more unstable behavior.

In the annual photo, the US dollar has even changed by a high of 7.72 quetzals on average, while its lowest level has been 7.48 quetzals on average. The US dollar is placed closer to its value than to the minimum.

Guatemalan

quetzal

The quetzal is the legal tender used in Guatemala and was founded upon the issuance of the Monetary Law enacted in 1924, when then-President José María Orellana ordered the replacement of the Guatemalan peso.

The Guatemalan currency is currently divided into one hundred cents and was initially worth 10 cents above the US dollar until in 1980 it fell to par, recovering months later.

Currently, the quetzal is equivalent to 7.50 units per US dollar and 9.25 units per euro, making it one of the 30 monetary units in Ibero-America and the world to be one of the most stable.

The body in charge of regulating the issuance of the currency is the Bank of Guatemala, and today coins of 5, 10, 25 and 50 cents of quetzal and 1 quetzal are known, while 1, 5, 10, 20, 50, 100 and 200 quetzals circulate in banknotes.

In its attempts to lower the production prices of coins, the government has sought to introduce coins with different materials such as opting for steel instead of nickel or brass-plated steel.

According to official figures, the Guatemalan government has assured that the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) grew by 7.5% at the end of 2021, a growth not seen for 40 years.

On the other hand, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) expects that by 2022 the Guatemalan economy will continue with a positive performance driven in part by foreign trade, remittances from the United States and a considerable drop in inflation.

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