Perfil (Sabado)

Banks need more vault space to store piles of pesos

- BY IGNACIO OLIVERA DOLL & PATRICK GILLESPIE

Ar gentina’s peso bills are depreciati­ng so quickly as inflation approaches 100 percent that banks are running out of space to store banknotes.

Banks in the crisis-prone economy, including Banco Galicia and the local unit of Spain’s Banco Santander SA, are installing more vaults to store banknotes, according to people familiar with their plans. Just last week, a business chamber in Buenos Aires called on the Central Bank to start printing large-denominati­on bills to tackle the increasing problems of transactin­g with an ever-greater number of bills.

The Central Bank has so resisted the calls to print a bill with denominati­on of more than 1,000 pesos, which on Wednesday was only worth US$2.65 when valued at commonly-used, informal exchange rates. With prices rising by nearly triple digits at an annual pace, the dilemma has left Argentines withdrawin­g dozens of bills at ATMS for ordinary amounts, while tourists often carry wads of cash.

For banks, which have to transport the cash to bank branches and ATMS, that also opens unique space challenges.

In response to the problem, Banco Galicia plans to open up two new vaults this year for cash storage, having already increased the total number of vaults from two in 2019 to 10 last year, according to a person with knowledge of the matter. This investment will allow it to expand its storage capacity by 30 percent to US$164 million in bills of 100 pesos, the person said.

Santander Rio is also taking on more vault space, possibly doubling its storage footprint, according to another person with knowledge of the matter, who asked not to be named discussing private plans.

Since President Alberto Fernández took office in December 2019, the amount of money in public circulatio­n has quadrupled to 3.8 trillion pesos (US$20.8 billion) from 895 billion pesos, according to Central Bank data. Meanwhile, the 1,000-peso note has remained the largest denominati­on.

Spokespeop­le for Grupo Financiero Galicia SA, the parent company of Banco Galicia, and Santander Rio didn’t immediatel­y comment.

A business chamber that groups small firms in Argentina’s capital called on the monetary authority to print larger bills to facilitate commerce.

“Transporti­ng, mobilising and withdrawin­g a greater number of bills every time increasing­ly provokes unsafe situations beyond creating complicati­ons and expenses,” Fabian Castillo, head of Buenos Airesbased FECOBA, said in a statement.

A spokesman for Argentina’s Central Bank said no announceme­nt was expected on larger bills and declined to comment on FECOBA’S request.

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