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Argentina's Debt Comeback Calms The Peso And Lifts A Cautious Merval
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points
Argentina's markets woke up on Thursday still digesting a rare piece of good news: the government has sold a new Bonar 2029N dollar bond, raising 1 billion dollars at a yield just above 9 percent after drawing more than 1.4 billion in bids.
Local desks describe the auction as a“clean” return to voluntary debt markets, in sharp contrast to the years when heavy-handed intervention and populist budgets scared off lenders and pushed risk spreads into four digits.
The reaction was immediate. On Wednesday the S&P Merval gained 0.9 percent to 3,013,647 points, sovereign dollar bonds added around 0.5 percent and country risk slipped toward 628 basis points, testing its lowest levels in three weeks.
Analysts say the clear winners were the new bond itself, the broader sovereign curve, the Merval, Loma Negra's New York-listed shares and investors who had positioned for a successful sale.
In foreign exchange, the peso also enjoyed a respite. The wholesale dollar closed at about 1,437.5 pesos, with the Banco Nación retail rate down to 1,460 and blue-market cash at roughly 1,450.
Financial dollars stayed contained near 1,470.5 (MEP) and 1,502 (CCL), leaving almost no gap between official and parallel rates.
Traders credit both the orthodox turn in fiscal policy and the structure of the new bond, which can be subscribed in MEP and paid in CCL, rewarding those willing to keep money inside the formal system rather than in the shadows.
The backdrop helps. After a third straight rate cut by the US Federal Reserve, the dollar index has slipped toward the high-90s, making life easier for high-beta markets like Argentina 's and hurting dollar bulls who had bet on a stronger greenback.
Technically, four-hour and daily charts for USD/ARS show a tight 1,430–1,455 band with cooling momentum, while the weekly trend remains upward but less aggressive.
The Merval's daily and intraday charts tell a similar story: prices near historic highs, volumes healthy but no longer euphoric, momentum indicators rolling over from overbought territory.
Recent losers, in this sense, are defensive stocks and short sellers who had counted on a failed auction or fresh currency panic; so far, a more orthodox playbook is proving them wrong.
A heavily subscribed Bonar 2029N issue marks Argentina's first dollar bond sale in seven years and nudges risk premiums lower.
Official and blue dollar rates are almost aligned as a softer global dollar and local debt optimism ease long-running FX stress.
The S&P Merval hovers near record levels, with post-election winners consolidating and short-term charts flashing slower momentum.
Argentina's markets woke up on Thursday still digesting a rare piece of good news: the government has sold a new Bonar 2029N dollar bond, raising 1 billion dollars at a yield just above 9 percent after drawing more than 1.4 billion in bids.
Local desks describe the auction as a“clean” return to voluntary debt markets, in sharp contrast to the years when heavy-handed intervention and populist budgets scared off lenders and pushed risk spreads into four digits.
The reaction was immediate. On Wednesday the S&P Merval gained 0.9 percent to 3,013,647 points, sovereign dollar bonds added around 0.5 percent and country risk slipped toward 628 basis points, testing its lowest levels in three weeks.
Analysts say the clear winners were the new bond itself, the broader sovereign curve, the Merval, Loma Negra's New York-listed shares and investors who had positioned for a successful sale.
In foreign exchange, the peso also enjoyed a respite. The wholesale dollar closed at about 1,437.5 pesos, with the Banco Nación retail rate down to 1,460 and blue-market cash at roughly 1,450.
Financial dollars stayed contained near 1,470.5 (MEP) and 1,502 (CCL), leaving almost no gap between official and parallel rates.
Traders credit both the orthodox turn in fiscal policy and the structure of the new bond, which can be subscribed in MEP and paid in CCL, rewarding those willing to keep money inside the formal system rather than in the shadows.
The backdrop helps. After a third straight rate cut by the US Federal Reserve, the dollar index has slipped toward the high-90s, making life easier for high-beta markets like Argentina 's and hurting dollar bulls who had bet on a stronger greenback.
Technically, four-hour and daily charts for USD/ARS show a tight 1,430–1,455 band with cooling momentum, while the weekly trend remains upward but less aggressive.
The Merval's daily and intraday charts tell a similar story: prices near historic highs, volumes healthy but no longer euphoric, momentum indicators rolling over from overbought territory.
Recent losers, in this sense, are defensive stocks and short sellers who had counted on a failed auction or fresh currency panic; so far, a more orthodox playbook is proving them wrong.
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