Kuwait Times

Argentina CB bleeds reserves ahead of election

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BUENOS AIRES: Argentina’s central bank kept selling dollars in defense of the crumbling peso on Friday, as concern increased over the bank’s falling reserves ahead of today’s presidenti­al election dreaded by the financial markets. With the upcoming vote increasing jitters about the recession- and inflationr­acked economy, money changers on the streets of Buenos Aires squeezed the currency 7.6 percent lower to 75.5 per US dollar on the black market, extending losses for the week to 13.6 percent.

The formal peso, supported by the central bank, fell 0.3 percent to 59.99 versus the greenback, having weakened 24.4 percent over 11 weeks since the shock result of the country’s presidenti­al primary dumped cold water on the markets. The bank spent $220 million on interventi­ons on Friday, traders said, as the peso continued its four-year swoon under President Mauricio Macri, a free-markets advocate and Wall

Street darling expected to lose his reelection bid today.

The bank has shed $21 billion in reserves since the August primary, when Macri was dealt a surprising­ly severe beating by his Peronist challenger Alberto Fernandez. Reserves were at $45.26 billion on Friday as markets worried about a resurgence of government interventi­on in the economy under a Fernandez administra­tion. “My sense is that he will announce more strict capital controls from day one, because the reserve level is very low,” said Alberto Bernal, chief emerging markets strategist at XP Investment­s in New York.

The country has a $57 billion loan deal with the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, which has said it will evaluate its relationsh­ip with Argentina once the next government’s policies are announced.

Fernandez’s selection of former president and populist icon Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner as his vice presidenti­al candidate has also unnerved investors. “Alberto needs to make sure that Cristina stops talking about economic policy, because every time she speaks, the market and savers freak out. Fernandez will have very little time to deliver a coherent plan that the markets and the IMF can endorse,” Bernal said. Macri was elected on promises of “normalizin­g” an economy distorted by Fernandez de Kirchner’s heavy-handed trade and currency controls. But he overestima­ted his ability to attract investment and underestim­ated the inflationa­ry impact of his fiscal policies.

These included cuts in public utility subsidies that boosted electricit­y and heating bills for businesses, which in turn hiked prices for the goods and services they sold. Inflation took off and has yet to moderate. Consumer prices rose 5.9 percent in September alone. — Reuters

 ??  ?? BUENOS AIRES: Currency exchange values are displayed on the buy-sell board of a bureau de exchange in Buenos Aires, on Friday. —AFP
BUENOS AIRES: Currency exchange values are displayed on the buy-sell board of a bureau de exchange in Buenos Aires, on Friday. —AFP

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