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> ANALYSTS: MACRI LOSS MAY SPARK TURMOIL

Domestic and internatio­nal observers fear economic backlash, should Alberto Fernández finish more than five points ahead of President Macri and his allies in this weekend’s primaries.

- BY LUCAS ROBINSON

With the PASO primaries looming and polling gone dark, the question on the lips of most local and internatio­nal observers is by what margin Frente de Todos presidenti­al candidate Alberto Fernández will lead President Mauricio Macri by come Sunday night – and what will be the economic response come Monday morning.

The prevailing wisdom is that a five percent or greater victory by Fernández over President Mauricio Macri would spook in ves torsand interna ti on al econo mi cinte rests, exacerbati­ng fears of a possible return to power for Kirchneris­mo. If that were to come to fruition in October, it would likely signal a departure from Macri’s promarket policies.

“For whatever reason five percent seems to be the magic number. If the lead is less than five percent, the market will take comfort,” Edwin Gutierrez, a portfolio manager for Aberdeen Asset Management in London, told the Times.

“If it’s greater than the fivepercen­t gap then [Macri’s] got his work cut out for him, even assuming those third-party candidate supporters do defect,” he added.

Should Fernández obtain a decent showing, possible economic effects could include “pressure on the peso and worsening inflation, forcing the government to keep interest rates high, which stifles growth,” according to Benjamin Gedan, director of the Argentina Project at the Wilson Center, a Washington, D.C.based think tank.

A recent report by Goldman Sachs economists working with the firm’s Latin America investment research wing concluded that a six to seven percent victory by Fernández is the threshold to triggering an economic slide.

“A difference of more than six to seven percent would be an insurmount­able obstacle [for Macri], especially in a highly divisive and polarised political environmen­t” the report stated.

Not every analyst agrees there is a threshold. Matías Ranjerman, chief economist for economic research firm EcoLatina, urged against fixating on a five-percent threshold.

“I don’t see it as something so linear,” Ranjerman said.

The analyst added that a strong victory by Fernández would “unleash exchange pressures” for the peso, particular­ly if the Frente de Todos candidate kept up his “more radicalise­d” rhetoric on display in recent weeks.

“The credibilit­y of moderation for Alberto Fernández continues to evolve,” Ranjerman said. “Yet I understand there’s still a lot of possibilit­y to recover it.”

FUELLING FEARS

Fernández’s recent populist economic stances on the campaign trail has only fuelled fears for the markets and internatio­nal observers.

“Alberto Fernández has generally calmed markets by emphasisin­g a pragmatic approach to the economy,” said Gedan. “But of late, his remarks about the exchange rate and monetary policy have raised eyebrows.”

From vowing to decrease rates for the Leliq, a liquidity note issued by the Central Bank, to calls to negotiate subsidies for worker’s salaries, Fernández’s declaratio­ns have contribute­d to some of the peso’s recent volatility, said Guiterrez.

“I’m kind of torn between how much he believes this and how much he’s doing it intentiona­lly to undermine the peso, because he knows how key that is,” he added.

Macri’s vice-presidenti­al running-mate, Miguel Ángel Pichetto, launched a similar attack on Fernández Monday, saying the Kirchnerit­e candidate wanted to trigger a run on the banks, impact the exchange rate with the dollar and generate an economic scenario similar to the country’s crisis in 2001.

Yet Fernández’s continued focus on the “social economic question,” remains his greatest appeal to voters, according to Julio Burdman, director of Observator­io Electoral Consultore­s.

However, Burdman lauded the campaign of Macri and his allies for pushing back against polarisati­on and operating a campaign that has remained constantly in the public eye.

“The campaign from oficiliasm­o has been the best in 35 years,” Burdman told the Times.

Both campaigns, however, remain somewhat marooned with consolidat­ed support across age demo gr aphics.Whi lea majority of older voters support Macri andhisalli es, Fernán de zandh is Kirchernit­e allies have drawn support from the youth. This leaves both political factions vying for votes from the other side’s respective base of support, a tactic that’s been on full display in recent weeks.

In recent weeks, for example, Fernán de zandnat ion al de puty candidate Sergio Massa, now back in the fold, have repeatedly highlighte­d the cost of medication for the elderly and retirement. Macri, armed with a robust social media team, has aggressive­ly reached out to younger voters through technology, purchasing advertisem­ent spots on social networks that depict young people showing their support for the government in selfie videos.

“I think Macri is going to bet on the vote of younger people, who are a little more elusive in this last stretch of the campaign,” Burdman observed.

PROVINCIAL POLITICS

For investors, the marquee race is between Fernández and Macri, which leaves the contest for Buenos Aires Province – where former economy minister Axel Kicillof is taking on Governor María Eugenia Vidal – as a “secondary” race, Aberdeen’s Guiterrez said.

“If ‘Fer nández-squared’ wins and Vidal wins, the market’s not really going to care,” Gutierrez said. “And vice versa. If Macri wins that’s what the market’s going to focus on.”

While Vidal has admitted she has pulled “from behind” of Kicillof in terms of support, the Juntos por el Cambio campaign is confident the governor has consolidat­ed support in recent works. Lacking support in the south of the Conurbano, she still enjoys strong backing in its north and east, and has campaigned heavily in cities like Mar del Plata, Bahía Blanca and La Plata.

“Kicillof benefits from Cristina’s support in the former president’s political stronghold,” said Gedan of the Wilson Center. “That said, he has little appeal to many poor and working-class Peronists, and Vidal would probably dispatch with him easily if she were not burdened by an unpopular president in her party.”

Regardless of who triumphs Sunday and who eventually wins the general election in October, the country’s entrenched economic issues remain pending. Furthermor­e, internatio­nal investors and interests remain convinced that Macri will win in October.

“I think they’re a little too confident that Macri’s going to pull this off,” Gutierrez said. “Also they can be a bit complacent in terms of the amount of work he’s got to do.”

He added: “Yes, there’ll be a knee jerk reaction, the bonds will be marked up, but don’t expect a big wave of optimism to grip Argentina because the challenges are vast.”

 ??  ?? The candidates to watch in this weekend’s PASO elections.
The candidates to watch in this weekend’s PASO elections.

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