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Argentina’s interest rate hiked to 60% to counter currency woes

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Argentina’s Central Bank announced Thursday it has raised its benchmark interest rate from 45 to 60 percent in a bid to arrest a slide in the value of its currency.

Earlier Marcos Pena, President Mauricio Macri’s cabinet chief, was forced to deny the government was facing an economic disaster.

“We are not facing economic failure,” said Pena.

“This is a transformation, not failure. In that transformation there are difficult moments,” he said.

The sell-off left the peso trading at around 39 to the dollar.

Crisis has gripped the South American giant’s economy over the previous 24 hours.

Macri had on Wednesday unexpectedly requested an acceleration to the IMF funding of $50 million agreed in June.

The government has already drawn down a first tranche of $15 billion — some of which has been used to try and prop up the peso.

A statement from the president aimed at calming the markets appeared to have done the opposite after his request — effectively to get early access to the remaining $35 billion of the loan — sent the peso plummeting almost 7.0 percent by the close.

Despite explicit support from the International Monetary Fund for his policies, the peso opened a further 4.0 percent lower on Thursday — prompting the Central Bank’s intervention.

The Bank pledged to keep interest rates unchanged at 60 percent until at least December. – IMF Backing –

The IMF’s backing alone failed to bolster the currency, which has lost more than 45 percent of its value against the dollar since the beginning of the year.

IMF chief Christine Lagarde said Wednesday she had agreed to Macri’s request to speed up disbursement of the loan in a bid to shore up Argentina’s battered economy.

In return for IMF support, the government has committed to reducing its budget deficit to 2.7 percent this year, from 3.9 percent in 2017, and to 1.3 percent of GDP next year.

But analysts said the government needs to provide more detail about how it plans to achieve aggressive IMF fiscal targets, if markets are to be assuaged.

On top of that, the government faces a major obstacle in November, when a $7 billion foreign exchange debt repayment is due. This will be a key flashpoint,” said Edward Glossop, Latin American specialist with Capital Economics.

“Regardless of what happens from here, the country’s weak balance sheets mean that Argentine markets will remain extremely vulnerable to swings in investor risk appetite,” added Glossop.

Speaking at the opening of the Council of the Americas business chamber in Buenos Aires, Pena attributed the market volatility to Argentina’s recent history.

“We are the country that has the most times violated its international contracts in the world, which has lied and cheated the rest of the time, and has shown again and again — until now — that it is not willing to seek fiscal balance and depend on its own resources,” he said.

He insisted the path taken by Macri, since he took office in December 2015 after the free-spending leftist government of Cristina Kirchner, is one “of fiscal balance, development and growth.”

The current exchange turbulence was attributable to “structural vulnerabilities” following a massive drought that affected agricultural production, the main generator of foreign currency, and a “change in the financial and commercial context in the world, notably due to tensions between the United States and China,” Pena said.

“There are no magic solutions, you have to go for the truth.”

Macri had sought to soothe the turbulence in a statement before markets opened on Wednesday, assuring Argentines that help is on the way.

“Over the past week, we have had new expressions of lack of confidence in the markets, especially over our ability to obtain financing for 2019,” Macri acknowledged.

He said the IMF would provide “all the funds necessary to guarantee the fulfillment of the financial program next year.”  AFP

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