Perfil (Sabado)

Government tells banks they need approval to move profits overseas

Brutal week for peso and reserves closes with first capital control after Central Bank orders financial institutio­ns to seek authorisat­ion before transferri­ng.

- – TIMES/AFP/BLOOMBERG

The government slapped on its first capital control yesterday after a punishing week for the peso, economic indicators and Argentine assets on local and internatio­nal markets.

A resolution from the Central Bank announced that banks and financial institutio­ns were now required to seek authorisat­ion before transferri­ng earnings abroad.

In practice, it establishe­s a capital control that only applies to banks and the profits generated by their operations in Argentina.

“Financial institutio­ns must have the prior authorisat­ion of the Central Bank of the Argentine Republic for the distributi­on of their results,” a statement read.

The move comes just days after officials announced the government would postpone US$7 billion of payments on short-term local notes held by institutio­nal investors this year

and seek the “voluntary reprofilin­g” of US$50 billion of longer-term debt.

The measure, which was set in place via Communicat­ion “A” 6768, comes with the peso depreciati­ng further against the dollar in the exchange markets.

The Central Bank and the Treasury have been haemorrhag­ing dollars this week, selling more than US$200 million on three consecutiv­e days. On the last working day before the PASOs, the government held US$66.3 billion in reserves. But yesterday they stood at just above US$54 billion, a slump of over 15 percent in three weeks.

Consultanc­y firm Capital Economics estimates that net reserves – which exclude deposits at commercial banks – were already at US$19 billion earlierint­heweek,downfromUS$30 billion in mid-April.

That only covered a quarter of Argentina’s gross external financing needs of US$100 billion, which includes debt maturing over the next year plus the current account deficit.

On Friday at the close, the dollar was selling at 61.55 pesos at Banco Nación, having dropped a further 1.64 percent in a day, bringing its slump this week to a full seven percent. JP Morgan’s country risk rating for emerging markets had soared to 2,536 points – the highest figure since 2005.

As rumours more controls might be coming down the line, Mendoza Senator (UCR) Julio Cobos said that if the Mauricio Macri administra­tion’s plan to restructur­e its debt does not work, the Government will have “no alternativ­e” but to establish more widespread capital controls.

‘SELECTIVE DEFAULT’

The latest spell of financial turbulence was exacerbate­d when Standard & Poor’s Global Ratings cut Argentina’s foreign and local debt to an assessment of “selective default” for a day, following the government’s announceme­nt Wednesday that it would postpone payments on as much as US$101 billion of debt as money poured out of the country.

“Following the continued inability to place short-term paper with private-sector market participan­ts, the Argentine government unilateral­ly extended the maturity of all short-term paper on August 28,” the ratings agency said in a statement on Thursday evening. “This constitute­s default under our criteria.”

S&P said it would lift the rating back up to ‘CCC’ (or “vulnerable to nonpayment”) on Friday since the new terms for the short-term debt came into effect immediatel­y. The announceme­nt also prompted Fitch Ratings to declare the nation in default, citing the delayed payments on local notes.

Bonds extended their decline Friday, though drops were more muted than previous days, probably since investors are already pricing in an over 90 percent chance of default in the next five years. Argentina’s century bond sold just two years ago fell below 40 cents on the dollar for the first time.

The peso and Argentine assets have tumbled over the past few weeks since opposition leader Alberto Fernández routed President Mauricio Macri in the August 11 primary vote. The peso is down more than 20 percent since then and bonds have hit record lows, with investors pricing in an over 90 percent chance of default in the next five years.

In a bid to calm panic and stabilise the mutual fund industry, the Central Bank offered to buy local notes held by the funds, providing liquidity that they in turn can use to meet a surge in investor redemption requests.

Harvard University economist Carmen Reinhart told Bloomberg this week she believed an Argentine default is all but inevitable – and that it would likely come sooner rather than later.

Reinhart described the government’s re-profiling plan asalreadya­defaultond­omestic debt, which rating companies will likely promptly respond to. While asking bondholder­s for more time doesn’t configure a default on its foreign obligation­s, it would be “a miracle if they get to six months.”

‘REPROFILIN­G’

In an eye-catching announceme­nt, the government said Wednesday it would postpone US$7 billion of payments on short-term local notes held by institutio­nal investors this year and seek the “voluntary reprofilin­g‘’ of US$50 billion of longer-term debt.

Speaking at a press conference, Finance Minister Hernán Lacunza also said the government start talks over repayments on US$44 billion it has received from the IMF.

However, he said that while those talks would begin before the October 27 general election, they would not be finished until after the new government takes over on December 10. The request for repayment extensions aims to allow the next government to “deploy its policies without financial restrictio­ns.”

An IMF delegation was visiting Argentina but has now returned, the Fund’s spokesman Gerry Rice said in a statement .

“Regarding the debt operation announced by the Argentine authoritie­s today, Fund staff is in the process of analyzing them and assessing their impact,” Rice said.

The IMF’s executive board announced Friday that it had convened for an informal meeting on Argentina, at which staff were expected to update officials on the country. No decision was expected about the Fund’s US$57-billion rescue package, nor the next disburseme­nt of its credit-line.

CROSSROADS

Now eyes are on the opposition and their response. Fernández now finds himself at a crossroads: by supporting the debt renegotiat­ion, he could boost Macri’s battered election chances; but shunning the move could reek of opportunis­m and hypocrisy, given his team have suggested the idea previously.

President Macri’s decision to send a bill to Congress to debate the plan to extend local debt maturities will eventually force the opposition to take a stance one way or another.

Fernández all-but echoed Reinhart’s terms on Friday, when he gave his first interview to a foreign media outlet, The Wall Street Journal.

The Frente de Todos leader described the government’s move to restructur­e short-term debt as proof Argentina was virtually insolvent and said that he was unwilling to support the government’s debt plan. By contrast, he would look to boost consumptio­n and wouldn’t ask permission from the IMF to do it.

“Now, there is no-one taking Argentine debt, or anyone who can pay it. Argentina is in a virtual, hidden default,” he told the US newspaper.

 ??  ?? Argentina’s Central Bank in Buenos Aires. BLOOMBERG/SARAH PABST
Argentina’s Central Bank in Buenos Aires. BLOOMBERG/SARAH PABST

Newspapers in Spanish

Newspapers from Argentina