Oman Daily Observer

IMF studying Argentina request as peso crashes

Peso closed at a record low of 34.10 per US dollar and is down more than 45.3pc against the greenback this year

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BUENOS AIRES: The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund said it was studying a request from Argentina to speed up disburseme­nt of a $50 billion loan program after a collapse in investor confidence in President Mauricio Macri’s government sent the peso tumbling more than 7 per cent on Wednesday.

It was the biggest one-day decline in the peso since the currency was allowed to float in December 2015. It closed at a record low of 34.10 per US dollar and is down more than 45.3 per cent against the greenback this year, prompting massive central bank interventi­ons.

Nerves are frayed in Latin America’s No. 3 economy as it struggles to break free from its notorious cycle of once-a-decade financial crises. The last one, which was punctuated by a 2002 debt default, tossed millions of middleclas­s Argentines into poverty.

The run on the peso prompted Argentina to turn to the IMF for the $50 billion credit line earlier this year. As part of the deal, Argentina’s government pledged to speed up plans to reduce the fiscal deficit.

But given the peso’s continued depreciati­on, which makes the country’s dollar-denominate­d debts more expensive to pay, investors are increasing­ly concerned that the IMF help may not be enough.

“We have agreed with the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund to advance all the necessary funds to guarantee compliance with the financial program next year,” Macri said in a televised address on Wednesday. “This decision aims to eliminate any uncertaint­y.” “Over the last week we have seen new expression­s of lack of confidence in the markets, specifical­ly over our financing capacity in 2019,” Macri said.

IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde responded by saying in a statement that the multi-lateral lender’s staff would “reexamine the phasing of the financial program.” She said that the “more adverse internatio­nal market conditions” had not been “fully anticipate­d” when the IMF and Argentina reached the deal in June.

“Authoritie­s will be working to revise the government’s economic plan with a focus on better insulating Argentina from the recent shifts in global financial markets, including through stronger monetary and fiscal policies,” Lagarde said.

Speaking to reporters after the IMF statement was issued, Treasury Minister Nicolas Dujovne said the government would reduce the size of its financing program, but did not provide specifics If Macri was trying to calm investors, it did not work.

“The market is saying: ‘Just the fact that you are engaging in this conversati­on makes me very, very nervous,’” Daniel Osorio, president of New York-based consultanc­y Andean Capital Advisors, said in a telephone interview.

The peso’s decline has contribute­d to a jump in inflation, which hit a 12-month rate of 31.2 per cent in July. In response, the central bank has hiked interest rates to 45 per cent and sold more than $13 billion in reserves, including $300 million in an auction on Wednesday.

 ?? — Reuters ?? People walk past an electronic board showing currency exchange rates in Buenos Aires’ financial district, Argentina.
— Reuters People walk past an electronic board showing currency exchange rates in Buenos Aires’ financial district, Argentina.

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