Downward pressure on the peso has been steady all year and
intensified of late as the government continues to print its way
out of a budget deficit, while inflation rising to near 40% and
a lack of confidence in economic and monetary policies further
weigh on the currency.
"If the population does not trust the price of the dollar where
it is, if it considers that it is going to rise and is scared by
the fall in reserves, there will be no choice but to devalue,"
said Gabriel Torres, the country's analyst at credit ratings
agency Moody's.
Graphic: Argentina's diverging peso -
https://graphics.reuters.com/
ARGENTINA-CURRENCY/RESERVES/
nmovaddlkpa/chart.png
Argentina is on track for a 12% economic contraction this year
partly due to measures taken to combat the COVID-19 pandemic and
output is still some 30% below pre-pandemic levels. The
official, controlled peso exchange rate has fallen 25% this
year, closing Thursday at just over 80 per dollar. The
unofficial rate is near 160. <ARS=> <ARSB=>
"Argentina is now at a worse starting point and a more difficult
path to accumulate sufficient liquidity to repay future debt
liabilities," said in a note Siobhan Morden, head of Latin
America fixed income strategy at Amherst Pierpont Securities in
New York.
"The stock of assets is now negative - net liquid FX reserves -
against more than $150 billion in future USD debt payments."
Gross reserves have fallen to some $39 billion from near $43
billion a year ago and a $77 billion recent peak in April 2019,
while net reserves - subtracting central bank liabilities not in
pesos - are much lower depending on the source.
"It is impossible for a government with the limited resources
that Argentina has to fight against the macroeconomic
fundamentals," said Moody's' Torres, who sees tighter currency
controls "because the reserves continue to fall, and depending
on the measure that one uses of net reserves, they are
approaching zero or they are not far from that."
Graphic: Argentina's dollar drain -
https://graphics.reuters.com/
ARGENTINA-CURRENCY/RESERVES/
jznvnnnekvl/chart.png
Finance Minister Martin Guzman earlier this month said
Argentina, in the midst of repackaging its $44 billion debt with
the International Monetary Fund, will seek a type of agreement
with the IMF that will require commitment to stringent economic
reforms.
The reforms could include softening capital controls and letting
the peso float at least more freely, which could slow the rush
to dollarize.
"It would take an overhaul of the monetary policy setup,
probably under the guise of a new IMF agreement, to prevent a
more disorderly adjustment of the currency in the medium term,"
said Capital Economics' emerging markets economist Nikhil
Sanghani in a note.
(Reporting by Rodrigo Campos and Eliana Raszewski; Editing by
Toby Chopra)
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