Macri, Fernandez Play Game of Chicken as Argentina Markets Sink

Macri, Fernandez Play Game of Chicken as Argentina Markets Sink

(Bloomberg) -- Who’s to blame for the epic Argentina market selloff over the past two days?

For President Mauricio Macri it’s clearly being caused by investors who are terrified of a return to a protectionist Peronist government that could reinstate currency controls, seize businesses and loosen fiscal discipline.

On Monday, he said as much, and asked voters to reconsider supporting Fernandez since the market was giving a glimpse of what’s to come.

Fears of Argentina Default Loom Large as Traders Dump Everything

For front runner Alberto Fernandez, the sharp move is the market punishing the government for loading up on too much debt, too quickly in the past few years and it’s now up to Macri to fix. While he says he doesn’t want to default, he hasn’t offered any olive branches to financial markets to calm their fears.

Government debt is falling another 6% or so on Tuesday.

Regardless of who you believe, neither seems prepared to send the messages needed to market participants that they can agree on a smooth transition (if the primary result holds in October) and that no one will benefit from chaos in the coming months.

Argentina’s 48% Stock Rout Second-Biggest in Past 70 Years

Essentially, they’re playing a game of chicken to see who flinches first as markets gap wider and price in a high probability for another disorderly debt default.

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.

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