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Argentina’s Treasury faces mounting strain as Peso-support efforts drain reserves

Argentina’s financial markets remained under pressure from persistent exchange rate pressures on Wednesday, as the squeeze on the Treasury accelerated due to the erosion of revenue from a special liquidation scheme with agricultural exporters.

The Ministry of Economy has sold almost $1.6 billion over the past six sessions to support the weakening peso, according to traders.

Since the ministry has never opened its market operations, investors can only gauge the scale of interventions.

“This figure becomes even more significant considering that there are still many trading sessions until the midterm elections this month,” Wise Capital announced.

“In just four trading days, following the near-complete withdrawal of agricultural exporters, the Treasury has already lost $1.35 billion—over 60% of the $2.23 billion raised under the zero-withholding tax scheme,” according to the company.

The quick depletion of the Treasury’s resources highlights the rising financial tensions ahead of Argentina’s midterm elections on October 26, which are viewed as a major test for President Javier Milei as he navigates the second half of his term with minimal congressional support.

Washington trip seeks lifeline amid market unease

Economy Minister Luis Caputo is in the United States presenting a plan for financial aid from the United States in a bid to tame market volatility to ease pressure on the peso.

The $20 billion currency swap deal is one of the measures currently being discussed that could give Argentina some breathing room on its reserves.

Market players are awaiting details of any US aid, which could affect the government’s ability to maintain the exchange rate target and manage its debt obligations in the short term.

Gold is still trading at a very high uncertainty level after traders are balancing the prospect of new policy measures after the election.

Meanwhile, international dollar bonds faced a decline on Wednesday as investors awaited US news.

Roberto Geretto of AdCap said:

After the elections, a new arrangement is probable, with a more flexible exchange rate and lower real interest rates, to sustain reserve accumulation and more manageable Treasury debt rollovers.

Peso stability hinges on continued intervention

The wholesale peso began flat at 1,430 per dollar, supported by significant block currency sales intended to reduce volatility.

Nonetheless, the peso remains near the upper edge of its floating band, a level that, if exceeded, would force the Central Bank (BCRA) to intervene with additional reserve sales.

“Traders are closely watching Treasury operations and estimating how much room is left before the BCRA must step in again around the 1,480 peso mark,” according to Gustavo Ber, an economist.

The government must balance short-term stability with the possibility of increasing resource depletion.

Market agreement is developing that the current policy seeks to hold the line just until the election, after which a shift toward a more flexible exchange rate regime is possible, especially if the United States provides major financial support.

Asset markets under continued pressure

Argentina had an intense day of sales on its asset market on Wednesday, as investors positioned in their portfolios for a change of national direction and of possible turbulence after the elections.

Local instruments remained under selling pressure as investors remained cautious amid uncertainty, leading to both the election results and possible further announcements from the United States, traders said.

To date, these Treasury interventions have prevented a deeper peso decline, but at an enormous expense.

Accordingly, with dwindling reserves and fading confidence, Argentina’s economic authorities have a dwindling opportunity to curb the currency drop before pressing their limited liquidity reserves.

With midterm elections just around the corner, markets are zeroed in on whether Washington’s assistance, and the potential softening of exchange-rate policy, will alleviate what is a pressing crisis for the Argentine economy.

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