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Argentina's Tightrope: A Calm Peso, Rebounding Stocks, And The Policy Bet Behind Both
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Argentina woke up to an unusual sight: calm across all versions of the peso. The wholesale rate hovered near 1,401 per dollar while the blue dollar traded around 1,465, with market-based rates close by (MEP near 1,474; CCL about 1,491). A 4–6% gap between the official and parallel rates is narrow by local standards.
It tells a simple story on the surface-FX liquidity looks adequate and the market is being carefully smoothed-and a more complicated one underneath: investors think this calm depends on policy support that may change after the October 26 vote.
Equities extended a two-day rebound. The S&P Merval rose 0.88% Thursday to 1,929,505 as traders leaned into headlines about potential U.S. backing-talk of a Treasury swap line and a separate private-sector facility-plus steady local intervention.
Global conditions helped too: the U.S. Dollar Index sat around 98, a softer backdrop that eases pressure on emerging-market currencies.
Here's the story behind the story. The narrow peso gaps are not a sign of full health; they are a sign of control. Forwards still point to a weaker peso, and officials have floated the idea of widening the currency band after the midterms.
If that happens, today's well-behaved market could reprice quickly. That tension-visible calm, future risk-is why traders are buying selectively rather than chasing a trend.
The tape reflects that caution. On USD/ARS, the four-hour chart shows a gentle up-swing pressing resistance at 1,405–1,427; the daily chart is a holding pattern with support near 1,388–1,395.
The Merval has built higher lows since early October, but faces layered resistance at 1.94–1.96 million and again near 2.01–2.05 million.
Winners and losers underline the split mood. Leading gainers included Central Puerto, Grupo Supervielle, Banco Macro, Pampa Energía, and Grupo Financiero Galicia. Decliners included BYMA, Ternium Argentina, Banco de Valores, Transportadora de Gas del Norte, and Metrogas.
Bottom line: Argentina is walking a policy tightrope. For now, smoothing plus the softer global dollar keep the peso steady and stocks buoyant. The next move hinges on post-election FX rules and how much external support actually materializes.
It tells a simple story on the surface-FX liquidity looks adequate and the market is being carefully smoothed-and a more complicated one underneath: investors think this calm depends on policy support that may change after the October 26 vote.
Equities extended a two-day rebound. The S&P Merval rose 0.88% Thursday to 1,929,505 as traders leaned into headlines about potential U.S. backing-talk of a Treasury swap line and a separate private-sector facility-plus steady local intervention.
Global conditions helped too: the U.S. Dollar Index sat around 98, a softer backdrop that eases pressure on emerging-market currencies.
Here's the story behind the story. The narrow peso gaps are not a sign of full health; they are a sign of control. Forwards still point to a weaker peso, and officials have floated the idea of widening the currency band after the midterms.
If that happens, today's well-behaved market could reprice quickly. That tension-visible calm, future risk-is why traders are buying selectively rather than chasing a trend.
The tape reflects that caution. On USD/ARS, the four-hour chart shows a gentle up-swing pressing resistance at 1,405–1,427; the daily chart is a holding pattern with support near 1,388–1,395.
The Merval has built higher lows since early October, but faces layered resistance at 1.94–1.96 million and again near 2.01–2.05 million.
Winners and losers underline the split mood. Leading gainers included Central Puerto, Grupo Supervielle, Banco Macro, Pampa Energía, and Grupo Financiero Galicia. Decliners included BYMA, Ternium Argentina, Banco de Valores, Transportadora de Gas del Norte, and Metrogas.
Bottom line: Argentina is walking a policy tightrope. For now, smoothing plus the softer global dollar keep the peso steady and stocks buoyant. The next move hinges on post-election FX rules and how much external support actually materializes.

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