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Judgment Day Awaits for Plan to Avert Argentina’s Economic Crisis

Treasury Minister Dujovne will be meeting with IMF Chief Lagarde to request faster payments from a $50 billion credit line.

Judgment Day Awaits for Plan to Avert Argentina’s Economic Crisis
The Buenos Aires Stock Exchange (BCBA) stands in Buenos Aires, Argentina. (Photographer: Erica Canepa/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Argentine President Mauricio Macri’s fresh push to save his economy from crisis faces the verdict of investors on Tuesday after U.S. markets reopen after the Labor Day holiday. Bonds gained in early trading.

The government announced emergency measures Monday including new export taxes in an attempt to regain investor confidence after the peso tumbled 25 percent last month. Trading in the currency on Monday was too thin to judge if the plan was a success or not. Bonds due 2028 fell 26 basis points to yield 10.5 percent at 7:18 a.m. in New York, down from an all-time high last week.

Judgment Day Awaits for Plan to Avert Argentina’s Economic Crisis

As investors give their response, Treasury Minister Nicolas Dujovne will be meeting with International Monetary Fund Director Christine Lagarde in Washington to request faster payments from a $50 billion credit line. While the IMF response to Macri’s proposals may be positive, the market reaction is less clear. Early reviews on Monday of the new measures were mixed.

"They’re a positive step," said Graham Stock, senior sovereign strategist for emerging markets at $60 billion BlueBay Asset Management in London. "I expect the IMF response to be broadly favorable but we need to see details including the revised monetary targets."

Others were less enthusiastic.

"I didn’t see any magic bullets in today’s speeches,” said Guido Chamorro, London-based senior investment manager at Pictet Asset Management Ltd., who pointed to a recent survey that said that most investors in euro-debt are overweight Argentina. “It’s unclear who is left to buy bonds.”

In a presentation on Monday, Treasury Ministry officials said Argentina has $28.3 billion in financing needs for 2019. Those payments will be met by rolling over bonds worth $12 billion and IMF loans of $11.7 billion, while other global financial institutions cover the rest.

With U.S. markets closed, volume on foreign-exchange markets was low. That didn’t stop the central bank selling $100 million at an average price of 37.9780 per dollar just before the market closed. The Merval stock index fell 1.7 percent.

The Proposals

Macri plans to halve the number of ministries and impose the levies on exports in an attempt to balance the budget by 2019, a year earlier than previously expected. The measures come on top of a previously announced government hiring freeze and reduced subsidies on utilities like electricity. The subsidy cutbacks have become a source of anger for Argentines as they face soaring bills at the same time as wages fail to keep up with price increases.

Judgment Day Awaits for Plan to Avert Argentina’s Economic Crisis

The backdrop to all these emergency measures is an economy heading for its second recession in three years. Even before a selloff in the peso last week, Dujovne said Argentina’s economy would contract at least 1 percent this year.

Moreover, consumer prices are rising at a rate above 30 percent, a far cry from the government’s initial inflation target of 15 percent. The peso is down more than 50 percent this year, the worst-performing currency in emerging markets.

The announcement marked the first time since the turmoil began that Macri took measures "of the same scale as the crisis," according to local consulting firm Delphos Investment. The next test will be his coalition’s ability to include cuts to public spending in the 2019 budget, which will be submitted to congress this month.

"We still have serious doubts" about bipartisan support, analysts at Delphos wrote in a note. “This may be a key determining factor to the success of the plan, especially with a government that doesn’t have congressional majorities."

To contact the reporters on this story: Patrick Gillespie in Buenos Aires at pgillespie29@bloomberg.net;Carolina Millan in Buenos Aires at cmillanronch@bloomberg.net;Pablo Gonzalez in Buenos Aires at pgonzalez49@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Vivianne Rodrigues at vrodrigues3@bloomberg.net, Philip Sanders, Andres R. Martinez

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