Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Argentina's Stock Market Pauses Rally As Peso Holds Steady With Conservative Backing


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Argentina's peso held firm against the U.S. dollar on November 7, 2025, with the official exchange rate unchanged at 1,475 ARS per USD, while the parallel "blue" market rate dipped slightly to 1,435 ARS, narrowing the gap to a mere 2.7%.

This stability reflects growing investor confidence in President Javier Milei's bold economic overhauls, which have drawn praise for dismantling entrenched inefficiencies inherited from previous socialist policies that fueled chronic inflation and capital flight.

The U.S. Dollar Index edged up to 99.80 overnight, yet failed to unsettle the ARS, buoyed by U.S. Treasury interventions and discussions of a potential $20 billion debt facility.

Milei's rejection of a free-floating peso until at least 2027 underscores a prudent approach to controlled devaluation, contrasting sharply with the fiscal recklessness of past left-leaning administrations.

Analysts, including JPMorgan's Jamie Dimon, commended Milei's "good job" on reforms, suggesting Argentina may sidestep additional loans, while Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent hailed the government as a "beacon" against socialism.



In the stock marke, the S&P Merval Index paused after recent gains, declining 2.45% to 2,973,544 points on November 6 amid global equity weakness.

Trading volumes fell 2.13% to 122.8 billion ARS, with financial and energy sectors leading the retreat. Top gainers included DOME (+38.33% to 96.0 ARS), A3 (+7.43% to 3,470 ARS), GBAN (+2.19% to 2,335 ARS), TRAN (+1.31% to 3,100 ARS), and BOLT (+1.30% to 39.00 ARS).



Leading losers were ROSE (-7.82% to 165.00 ARS), INTR (-7.48% to 396.0 ARS), SEMI (-6.69% to 23.70 ARS), MORI (-6.19% to 39.40 ARS), and GCDI (-5.65% to 21.70 ARS).

Technical indicators suggest short-term consolidation but a resilient uptrend, supported by projected 4.5%-5.5% GDP growth in 2025.

While risks like reserve pressures persist, international alliances and conservative fiscal discipline offer a path to sustained recovery, distancing Argentina from its socialist past.

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The Rio Times

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