La Semana

ARGENTINA IN TALKS WITH IMF TO EASE RESERVES TARGETS AMID DROUGHT

- BY JORGELINA DO ROSARIO AND JORGE OTAOLA

LONDON/BUENOS AIRES, (Reuters) - Argentina's government is in final talks with Internatio­nal Monetary Fund officials to ease foreign exchange reserves targets for 2023 under the country's $44 billion program, two sources close to the matter told Reuters.

The move comes as the South American commoditie­s exporter is facing the worst drought in 60 years, which has pummeled soy, corn and wheat crops, compromisi­ng already weak foreign exchange reserves.

Discussion­s include the impact of the drought on 2023 goals for net reserves, said an Argentina economy ministry adviser who asked not to be named because the talks were ongoing.

Talks are now focused on agreeing on exact figures, said one of the sources. An Argentine government source, who asked not to be named because discussion­s are private, said talks are ongoing but nothing is defined yet.

Officials for the Economy Ministry declined to comment.

A spokespers­on for the IMF said that the Fund's staff and the Argentine authoritie­s are discussing the fourth review of the programme, and it will communicat­e the outcome of those discussion­s in due course.

A group of representa­tives from

Argentina's central bank and Economy Ministry arrived in Washington this week for the fourth review of the extended fund facility program approved in March 2022, after a failed bailout four years earlier.

Meanwhile, Economy Minister Sergio Massa met with IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva on the sidelines of the Group of 20 meetings in Bengaluru, India.

The talks to change the central bank net reserves targets for this year are pre-emptive, as the country did meet its end-december 2022 net reserves targets, another source added.

The world's top exporter of soy oil and meal is also facing a rise in import costs of energy and fertilizer­s due to the war in Ukraine, adding pressure to much-needed dollar reserves.

These discussion­s come shortly after the country decided in January to start a debt buyback of its overseas debt of up to $1 billion. Earlier this month, IMF official Nigel Chalk said that Argentina shouldn't undermine targets to rebuild its "scarce" foreign currency reserves.

Net reserves today stand at around $4.4 billion, according to calculatio­ns from Buenos Aires-based brokerage firm PPI Inversione­s.

Under the latest review, Argentina had been set the target of net reserves to increase by $5.5 billion at the end of March and $9.8 billion at the end of the year.

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