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Argentina May Be Cut Deeper Into Junk After Peso Plunge, S&P Says

S&P said Friday it may lower the nation’s long-term foreign currency rating from its current B+ grade.

Argentina May Be Cut Deeper Into Junk After Peso Plunge, S&P Says
People walk past the Central Bank of Argentina in Buenos Aires, Argentina. (Photographer: Erica Canepa/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Argentina’s credit rating may be cut further into junk territory by S&P Global Ratings amid a plunge in the peso and a bailout from the International Monetary Fund.

S&P said Friday it may lower the nation’s long-term foreign currency rating from its current B+ grade, which is four notches below investment grade -- and on par with Turkey, Greece and Fiji. The ratings company cited the risk of worsening creditworthiness and exchange rate volatility as potential threats to the economic adjustment measures undertaken by Mauricio Macri’s administration.

"Recent pressure on the Argentine currency could jeopardize the effective implementation of economic adjustment measures, absent further steps to boost investor confidence," S&P said in the statement.

Argentina May Be Cut Deeper Into Junk After Peso Plunge, S&P Says

Still, Macri’s commitment to stabilizing South America’s second-largest economy through difficult austerity measures, such as a $50 billion credit line from the IMF, should help maintain the government’s access to capital markets, which the nation had been locked out of for more than a decade. After tumbling a world-leading 50 percent this year, Argentina’s peso stabilized on Friday, following a series of steps by the Macri administration.

The central bank raised its benchmark interest rate to a world-high 60 percent on Thursday. A day earlier, Macri made a surprise appeal to the IMF, seeking to expedite payments under the record $50 billion credit line agreed in June. The Fund looks set to oblige, saying that high-level talks will begin Tuesday with the aim of “rapidly” submitting a revised lending plan to the IMF board.

To contact the reporter on this story: Ben Bartenstein in New York at bbartenstei3@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Rita Nazareth at rnazareth@bloomberg.net

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