Argentina's peso jumps on second day of capital controls

Reuters| Buenos Aires | Argentina

Updated: 03-09-2019 18:49 IST | Created: 03-09-2019 18:48 IST

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Argentina's peso opened sharply stronger on Tuesday, marking Wall Street's first reaction to Argentina's new currency controls after a long holiday weekend in the United States.

The peso was 5.36% stronger at 56 per U.S. dollar, traders said after the currency eked out a small gain on Monday. The pounding of Argentina's bonds eased in Europe after they fell to record lows on Monday and there were tentative gains in some foreign-traded bank shares, as investors waited for Wall Street's first reaction to Buenos Aires' imposition of capital controls over the weekend.

Frankfurt-listed American Depositary Receipts (ADR) of Grupo Financiero Galicia were up almost 1%, having tumbled 9.15% on Monday, but Banco Macro SA's ADRs slipped again. Brokers were quoting marginally higher prices for Argentina's badly mauled sovereign debt in Europe. Investors were cautiously awaiting the start of U.S. trading and for Wall Street's reaction to the weekend developments as U.S. markets were closed for a public holiday on Monday.

The peso closed 0.88% stronger in official markets on Monday but ended 0.79% weaker in the black market at 63.5 per dollar, a divergence underscoring mistrust of the official price. On Sunday, the government authorized the central bank to restrict purchases of dollars as it burns through its reserves to prop up the peso. The currency controls were a 180-degree turn for President Mauricio Macri, a free-market advocate who abolished capital controls after he came to power in 2015.

It was the government's latest attempt to stabilize the peso, which has lost 28% of its value since opposition presidential candidate Alberto Fernandez emerged as the clear front-runner in the Aug. 11 primary election. Fernandez and his running mate, former President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner, are considered a riskier prospect by investors, who fear Argentina could return to the interventionist policies of her former government.

On Monday, central bank president Guido Sandleris called Argentina's financial system "strong" and said the bank would adhere to its strict monetary policy, despite the currency restrictions. Sandler, speaking at a press conference, said the bank was in talks with the IMF to "redefine" the goals for September under its $57 billion financing agreement.

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(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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