
403
Sorry!!
Error! We're sorry, but the page you were looking for doesn't exist.
Washington Steps Into Argentina's Peso Battle - And What It Reveals
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) In a rare, overt move, the U.S. Treasury has begun buying Argentine pesos in two places that actually set day-to-day prices: the blue-chip swap market (known locally as contado con liquidación, or CCL) and the spot market.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said Washington is coordinating closely with Buenos Aires-an unusual level of public detail for a currency operation and a signal that the U.S. aims to steady a key South American economy rather than just comment from the sidelines.
The mechanics matter. The CCL is a legal channel used by companies and investors: you buy a peso asset in Argentina and sell its twin abroad for dollars, which creates a market-driven exchange rate.
When that rate swings, import costs, balance sheets, and household budgets feel it quickly. Intervening there, not just at an official bank counter, targets the real pressure point.
Behind the scenes, the market action pairs with a larger lifeline: a $20 billion currency-swap framework between the U.S. and Argentina's central bank, plus talks with banks and sovereign funds about an additional private facility near $20 billion.
U.S. Support to Stabilize Argentina
The goal is to shore up dollar liquidity, calm the parallel market, and buy time for reforms. Initial market signals were mixed-Argentine dollar bonds briefly firmed, while the parallel peso still slipped-but the direction will be judged over weeks, not hours.
Politics frame the effort. With legislative elections on October 26, Washington's support is explicitly linked to policy continuity rather than parties: continued backing presumes a reform path that rebuilds credibility and reserves.
That is not a blank check. If the policy anchor weakens, the appetite for dollars will outlast the dollars on offer. Why readers outside Argentina should care: a steadier peso reduces shockwaves across Mercosur supply chains, trade invoices, and investor risk appetite-including for Brazilian and multinational firms with Argentine exposure.
It also hints at a broader U.S. posture in Latin America: willing to act when market stress threatens regional stability, but expecting reforms in return.
What to watch next: activation and terms of the swap line, whether the private facility materializes, the gap between CCL and official rates, and whether today's support lowers Argentina's cost of capital over the next quarter.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said Washington is coordinating closely with Buenos Aires-an unusual level of public detail for a currency operation and a signal that the U.S. aims to steady a key South American economy rather than just comment from the sidelines.
The mechanics matter. The CCL is a legal channel used by companies and investors: you buy a peso asset in Argentina and sell its twin abroad for dollars, which creates a market-driven exchange rate.
When that rate swings, import costs, balance sheets, and household budgets feel it quickly. Intervening there, not just at an official bank counter, targets the real pressure point.
Behind the scenes, the market action pairs with a larger lifeline: a $20 billion currency-swap framework between the U.S. and Argentina's central bank, plus talks with banks and sovereign funds about an additional private facility near $20 billion.
U.S. Support to Stabilize Argentina
The goal is to shore up dollar liquidity, calm the parallel market, and buy time for reforms. Initial market signals were mixed-Argentine dollar bonds briefly firmed, while the parallel peso still slipped-but the direction will be judged over weeks, not hours.
Politics frame the effort. With legislative elections on October 26, Washington's support is explicitly linked to policy continuity rather than parties: continued backing presumes a reform path that rebuilds credibility and reserves.
That is not a blank check. If the policy anchor weakens, the appetite for dollars will outlast the dollars on offer. Why readers outside Argentina should care: a steadier peso reduces shockwaves across Mercosur supply chains, trade invoices, and investor risk appetite-including for Brazilian and multinational firms with Argentine exposure.
It also hints at a broader U.S. posture in Latin America: willing to act when market stress threatens regional stability, but expecting reforms in return.
What to watch next: activation and terms of the swap line, whether the private facility materializes, the gap between CCL and official rates, and whether today's support lowers Argentina's cost of capital over the next quarter.

Legal Disclaimer:
MENAFN provides the
information “as is” without warranty of any kind. We do not accept
any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images,
videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information
contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright
issues related to this article, kindly contact the provider above.
Most popular stories
Market Research

- Thinkmarkets Adds Synthetic Indices To Its Product Offering
- Ethereum Startup Agoralend Opens Fresh Fundraise After Oversubscribed $300,000 Round.
- KOR Closes Series B Funding To Accelerate Global Growth
- Wise Wolves Corporation Launches Unified Brand To Power The Next Era Of Cross-Border Finance
- Lombard And Story Partner To Revolutionize Creator Economy Via Bitcoin-Backed Infrastructure
- FBS AI Assistant Helps Traders Skip Market Noise And Focus On Strategy
Comments
No comment