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Argentina Tests Investor Confidence With $1 Billion Peso-Denominated Bond Offering
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Argentina's government announced a $1 billion treasury bond auction for international investors, marking its first major foreign debt issuance since its 2020 sovereign default.
The five-year peso-denominated bond, auctioned May 28 under local law, allows subscription in U.S. dollars but converts proceeds to pesos at the official exchange rate.
Economy Minister Luis Caputo framed the move as a return to global markets, though analysts highlight structural differences from traditional sovereign bonds.
The bond's fixed interest rate will be set during bidding, with semiannual payments starting November 2025 and full principal repayment by May 2030.
Funds will refinance 8.55 trillion pesos ($7.4 billion) in domestic debt maturing May 30 while bolstering central bank reserves, currently at $28 billion.
Argentina's IMF agreement requires $4.6 billion in net reserve gains by September 2025, with experts suggesting $45-$48 billion needed to safely lift currency controls.
Argentina Tests Market Confidence with 2027 Put Bond
Investors gain an early exit option via a 2027 put clause, aligning with the end of President Javier Milei's term. The structure avoids immediate pressure on Argentina's currency markets by settling transactions through central bank accounts rather than the open FX system.
While officials emphasize no net debt increase, the operation extends peso debt maturity-critical given 2024's 211% inflation, now projected to fall below 30% in 2025.
Market response remains cautious. The bond lacks standard international safeguards like New York-law governance and collective action clauses.
Argentina 's country risk rating, though improved to under 600 basis points from 2020's 2,000+, still reflects lingering default concerns after three sovereign failures since 2001.
Success could unlock $5-$7 billion annual inflows through similar instruments, but persistent inflation and IMF dependency cloud long-term prospects. Tax exemptions and central bank intermediation aim to attract non-resident institutional buyers.
With monthly inflation recently dipping under 3% and GDP growth forecast at 4% for 2025, officials hope stabilizing trends will offset investor wariness. The bond's performance will signal whether Argentina can transition from crisis management to sustainable market access.
The five-year peso-denominated bond, auctioned May 28 under local law, allows subscription in U.S. dollars but converts proceeds to pesos at the official exchange rate.
Economy Minister Luis Caputo framed the move as a return to global markets, though analysts highlight structural differences from traditional sovereign bonds.
The bond's fixed interest rate will be set during bidding, with semiannual payments starting November 2025 and full principal repayment by May 2030.
Funds will refinance 8.55 trillion pesos ($7.4 billion) in domestic debt maturing May 30 while bolstering central bank reserves, currently at $28 billion.
Argentina's IMF agreement requires $4.6 billion in net reserve gains by September 2025, with experts suggesting $45-$48 billion needed to safely lift currency controls.
Argentina Tests Market Confidence with 2027 Put Bond
Investors gain an early exit option via a 2027 put clause, aligning with the end of President Javier Milei's term. The structure avoids immediate pressure on Argentina's currency markets by settling transactions through central bank accounts rather than the open FX system.
While officials emphasize no net debt increase, the operation extends peso debt maturity-critical given 2024's 211% inflation, now projected to fall below 30% in 2025.
Market response remains cautious. The bond lacks standard international safeguards like New York-law governance and collective action clauses.
Argentina 's country risk rating, though improved to under 600 basis points from 2020's 2,000+, still reflects lingering default concerns after three sovereign failures since 2001.
Success could unlock $5-$7 billion annual inflows through similar instruments, but persistent inflation and IMF dependency cloud long-term prospects. Tax exemptions and central bank intermediation aim to attract non-resident institutional buyers.
With monthly inflation recently dipping under 3% and GDP growth forecast at 4% for 2025, officials hope stabilizing trends will offset investor wariness. The bond's performance will signal whether Argentina can transition from crisis management to sustainable market access.
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