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U.S. Support For Argentina Turns Conditional As Trump Presses Milei
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Donald Trump tied future U.S. support for Argentina to the outcome of the country's October 26 legislative elections during a White House meeting with President Javier Milei on Tuesday.
This punctured a rally that had followed unusual U.S. intervention in Argentina's currency market last week. Buenos Aires had primed investors for big deliverables, including a $20 billion currency-swap framework to reinforce central-bank reserves and continued U.S. Treasury operations in the peso market.
Potential purchases of Argentine sovereign bonds were also rumored to reach up to $10 billion. It also promised a bilateral carve-out for roughly 150 products with zero or lower tariffs outside Mercosur, a softer path on IMF targets, and a special regime to draw U.S. investment.
No joint texts or detailed terms emerged after the meeting. Markets reversed fast. Sovereign bonds swung from gains to losses of up to 10 percent intraday, the peso weakened, and the parallel“blue” dollar closed near 1,420 per U.S. dollar.
The message investors heard: additional U.S. help, if any, now hinges on Milei strengthening his hand in Congress. The policy apparatus remains opaque.
The Treasury's October 9 move-buying pesos via intermediaries and outlining a $20 billion swap-steadied trading briefly, but crucial mechanics such as tenor, collateral, and draw triggers have not been disclosed.
Milei pushes austerity as politics and markets watch
At home, Milei is racing to convert an austerity program into legislative backing amid signs of a firmer Peronist opposition in vote-rich Buenos Aires Province and slipping presidential approval.
Why this matters beyond Argentina is straightforward. Financing terms for a G20 economy ripple through suppliers, energy and food trade, and regional debt pricing.
For Argentine households and firms, these headlines shape import costs, inflation expectations, and credit. For investors, the new variable is political conditionality at the highest level.
Attention now turns to whether Washington and Buenos Aires publish swap details, whether IMF targets are recalibrated again, and whether any trade or investment measures move from promises to paper before October 26.
This punctured a rally that had followed unusual U.S. intervention in Argentina's currency market last week. Buenos Aires had primed investors for big deliverables, including a $20 billion currency-swap framework to reinforce central-bank reserves and continued U.S. Treasury operations in the peso market.
Potential purchases of Argentine sovereign bonds were also rumored to reach up to $10 billion. It also promised a bilateral carve-out for roughly 150 products with zero or lower tariffs outside Mercosur, a softer path on IMF targets, and a special regime to draw U.S. investment.
No joint texts or detailed terms emerged after the meeting. Markets reversed fast. Sovereign bonds swung from gains to losses of up to 10 percent intraday, the peso weakened, and the parallel“blue” dollar closed near 1,420 per U.S. dollar.
The message investors heard: additional U.S. help, if any, now hinges on Milei strengthening his hand in Congress. The policy apparatus remains opaque.
The Treasury's October 9 move-buying pesos via intermediaries and outlining a $20 billion swap-steadied trading briefly, but crucial mechanics such as tenor, collateral, and draw triggers have not been disclosed.
Milei pushes austerity as politics and markets watch
At home, Milei is racing to convert an austerity program into legislative backing amid signs of a firmer Peronist opposition in vote-rich Buenos Aires Province and slipping presidential approval.
Why this matters beyond Argentina is straightforward. Financing terms for a G20 economy ripple through suppliers, energy and food trade, and regional debt pricing.
For Argentine households and firms, these headlines shape import costs, inflation expectations, and credit. For investors, the new variable is political conditionality at the highest level.
Attention now turns to whether Washington and Buenos Aires publish swap details, whether IMF targets are recalibrated again, and whether any trade or investment measures move from promises to paper before October 26.

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