![The Central Bank of Chile](https://www.infobae.com/resizer/v2/A5I43GGHGFETZOGZSWQ6N2JWPY.jpg?auth=e24fbdb1c6e03214d54717378d8410b24cb82d36f976f78b3858bc735d121efc&smart=true&width=350&height=233&quality=85)
(Bloomberg) -- Chile’s peso tumbled at the open Wednesday, dropping more than any other emerging-market currency, after the central bank announced plans to boost its international reserves.
The peso weakened 2.1% to 742.26 to the dollar as of 8:55 a.m. in Santiago. The currency hasn’t dropped that much in a day since June 18 last year.
The central bank said in a statement that it will start to replenish its reserves next week through daily purchases of $40 million at competitive auctions. The bank will buy a total of $12 billion ahead of the end of the International Monetary Fund’s Flexible Credit Line in May 2022. That will more than compensate for the $2.55 billion it spent in an intervention plan between December 2019 and January 2020.
The plan is to increase reserves to 18% of gross domestic product, the bank said.