Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Argentina Markets Jolt As U.S. Backstop Hopes Meet Politics


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Argentina's two big gauges-its exchange rates and its stock index-sent mixed signals overnight. The street-traded“blue” dollar hovered near ARS 1,420 while the wholesale reference held close to ARS 1,360, a surprisingly narrow gap by recent standards.

Financial dollars told a tougher story: the MEP sat around ARS 1,455 and the CCL neared ARS 1,480–1,500, showing investors still paying up to move money out. The global backdrop helped a little, with the U.S. Dollar Index slipping below 99.

Equities buckled. The S&P Merval flipped from early gains to finish about 3.8% lower near 1.885 million after traders reassessed headlines suggesting that expanded U.S. support for Argentina-understood by markets as an FX backstop-could be conditional on political performance in the October 26 midterms.

The shift cooled a relief rally that had built on hopes of U.S. help, while ETF flows into Argentine exposure remain fragile after recent months of net outflows.

The story behind the story is credibility. A tight blue–official spread usually signals a managed calm: authorities have liquidity, and panic is contained. But the higher MEP/CCL levels are a pressure gauge for capital controls and election risk.



Investors are not betting on a lasting peace; they are paying a premium for hedges until they know what post-election FX policy looks like-freer trading or another round of multiple rates.

Technical signals line up with that narrative. On the 4-hour USD/ARS chart, momentum has tilted against the dollar (RSI in the low 30s with a negative MACD), hinting the peso can firm modestly near term.



The daily chart is neutral and range-bound around ARS 1,355, with 1.34x–1.38x as the key band. For stocks, the Merval's bounce stalled at moving-average and trendline resistance; without clearer policy detail or stronger foreign inflows, the path of least resistance is choppy sideways.

What matters next: concrete terms of any U.S. facility, signals on reserves, clarity on the post-election FX regime, and whether the global dollar stays soft.

If the blue–official gap remains tight while financial dollars ease, confidence can rebuild. If the opposite happens, the calm will look like a pause rather than a turn.

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