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Argentine Markets Slump Raises Risks for Macri Ahead of Primary

Risks Increase for Macri Ahead of Primary as Markets Turn Sour

(Bloomberg) -- The path to re-election for Argentine President Mauricio Macri was already complicated, given stubbornly high inflation and an economy struggling to rebound from recession.

Now, just six days before the country votes in a mandatory primary election that will act as a giant poll ahead of the Oct. 27 first round, the government, central bank and investors are facing a fresh bout of volatility in financial markets amid trade disputes and a generalized risk-off mood.

Argentine Markets Slump Raises Risks for Macri Ahead of Primary

Argentine bonds fell on Monday, with the extra yield investors demand to hold government debt over U.S. Treasuries widening 71 basis points, the most since April, to 9 percentage points, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s EMBI Diversified index. Dollar bonds maturing in 2046 declined 3.1 cents to 75.64 cents on the dollar, with the yield rising to 10.26%, while the peso fell 1.9%.

Emerging market assets retreated on Monday after Chinese authorities let the yuan weaken past 7 per dollar for the first time in more than a decade. The moves come in the wake of President Donald Trump’s latest escalation of the trade war and added to concerns of a market already unnerved by the Federal Reserve’s signal that it won’t pursue an extended easing cycle.

Argentine Markets Slump Raises Risks for Macri Ahead of Primary

The headwinds will test Argentine policy makers who had until now been able to contain both external pressures on local markets as well as jitters over whether Macri’s main opponents will outperform in the primaries, which could add concern about the probability of policy continuation.

“A global risk-off sentiment and Argentina-specific uncertainty will likely cause the ARS to experience heightened volatility and periods of sudden selloffs,” said Per Hammarlund, the chief emerging-markets strategist at SEB AB in Stockholm. The peso could test 46.5 per dollar, according to Hammarlund.

While the economy and markets have been whipsawed during Macri’s first term, he remains the favored candidate among investors who saw him lift currency and capital controls, overhaul the statistics agency, cut subsidies and move closer to a balanced budget. Argentina is also backed by a record credit line from the International Monetary Fund.

Amid the recent turbulence, the nation’s central bank could sell dollars in the spot market if needed to avoid sharp moves in the peso amid an emerging market rout, according to a person with direct knowledge of the matter. Policy makers can use the monetary policy rate, foreign-exchange futures markets and the spot market to mitigate the impact on the peso, the person said.

“The ARS will maintain the correlation with EM currencies but I guess BCRA’s intervention will try to avoid any big underperformance of the peso” ahead of the primaries, said Daniel Chodos, the Buenos Aires-based head of Latin America sovereign credit strategy at Credit Suisse. He is looking to increase his exposure to the country’s bonds after the primary if the government performs well.

Diana Amoa, portfolio manager at JPMorgan Asset Management in New York, is neutral on the peso and also waiting for the primary results to reassess her position. James Barrineau, the New York-based head of emerging-market debt at Schroders says he would be willing to add money back to Argentina bonds if the primaries “go well.”

“Right now, appetite for risk is low across all global assets so Argentina could easily settle lower,” he said.

--With assistance from Davison Santana and Karina Montoya.

To contact the reporters on this story: Aline Oyamada in Sao Paulo at aoyamada3@bloomberg.net;Daniel Cancel in Sao Paulo at dcancel@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Julia Leite at jleite3@bloomberg.net, Alec D.B. McCabe

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