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Argentina and the IMF: Can This Marriage Be Saved?

It is hilarious reading some of the responses to this woman from the IMF that said she had a good meeting with Milei. Is the IMF actually going to give the funds? They keep posting over and over how the meetings are going well and then never had over the money.

 
It is hilarious reading some of the responses to this woman from the IMF that said she had a good meeting with Milei. Is the IMF actually going to give the funds? They keep posting over and over how the meetings are going well and then never had over the money.


The rug pull to Milei's millions of followers probably didn't help. Now he is illegally trying to put people on the Supreme Court. Doubt any of these things are helping his cause at all.
 
The rug pull to Milei's millions of followers probably didn't help. Now he is illegally trying to put people on the Supreme Court. Doubt any of these things are helping his cause at all.
I don't agree with what he is doing with the Supreme Court judge. We have rules and laws and we can't complain about Cristina and allow Milei to do unconstitutional things. I worry for the future.

The IMF for over a year say the talks are going well but they have not announced money yet. I wonder how long this can go on.
 
The IMF funds are close to coming and once they do you will see an explosion of euphoria.


Things sure changed quickly once Trump reiterated that he will impose tariffs. If he really does it there will probably be a recession.

They must be close as he is going to ask Congress to agree which the IMF requires so it must be close.

 
Sounds like some big $$$$ is coming soon.

According to UBS strategists, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) could provide Argentina with a new program worth up to $20 billion.

This new program would cover both principal and interest payments to the IMF during the remainder of President Javier Milei's term. The UBS analysts expect that at least 30% of the new package would be made available this year, based on past IMF deals.

While the specific breakdown of $12 billion for loan principal repayment and $8 billion in "new" funding is not explicitly mentioned in the search results, the overall figure of up to $20 billion aligns with the UBS projection.Argentina has a history of significant IMF support, including a $57.1 billion loan agreement in 2018, which was the largest in the Fund's history at that time.

The current discussions for a new program come as Argentina continues to face economic challenges and seeks to stabilize its economy.

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Why does the Central Bank buy a few million dollars every day and then friday they sold almost half a billion dollars in dollars? Help someone that does not understand anything understand this?
 
Why does the Central Bank buy a few million dollars every day and then friday they sold almost half a billion dollars in dollars? Help someone that does not understand anything understand this?
They don't want to have to sell their dollars but they are forced into it when locals are all rushing to buy dollars. That big move yesterday signals that people are going to get out of their carry trade positions. Things can move quickly once rumors spread. Usually they can't keep it a secret and word travels fast.
 
Washington, DC: IMF staff and the Argentine authorities have reached a staff-level agreement on a comprehensive economic program that could be supported by a 48-month arrangement under the Extended Fund Facility (EFF) totaling US$20 billion (SDR 15.267 billion or 479 percent of quota), subject to approval by the IMF Executive Board.The agreement builds on the authorities’ impressive early progress in stabilizing the economy, underpinned by a strong fiscal anchor, that is delivering rapid disinflation and a recovery in activity and social indicators. The program supports the next phase of Argentina’s homegrown stabilization and reform agenda aimed at entrenching macroeconomic stability, strengthening external sustainability, and unlocking strong and more sustainable growth, while also managing the more challenging global backdrop.The IMF Executive Board is expected to consider the proposed arrangement in the coming days.


 
But would the USA really force Argentina to severe ties with China? This seems totally unrealistic. And would Argentina do it? If the IMF funds don't come sounds like it is lights out.

They can't. Argentina is too in bed with China now.

Today Caputo all but admitted this is unsustainable the exchange rate.

 
The IMF debt seems like a ticking time bomb that will eventually have to get paid back. I don't care how much of a great deal they got. It all needs to be paid back. I never liked the IMF. Borrowed dollars to check an IMF box for Central Bank Reserves box even though it's a loan and NOT an asset. I know it gives them more time but I am worried about all this debt.
 
The IMF debt seems like a ticking time bomb that will eventually have to get paid back. I don't care how much of a great deal they got. It all needs to be paid back. I never liked the IMF. Borrowed dollars to check an IMF box for Central Bank Reserves box even though it's a loan and NOT an asset. I know it gives them more time but I am worried about all this debt.
Balance sheets can be deceptively simple. Take, for example, a home: the property appears as an asset, while the mortgage is listed as a liability. The homeowner’s equity—the difference between the two—is what contributes to net worth. The underlying structure can be more revealing than any individual number.

In the case of the Central Bank of Argentina (BCRA), a similar principle applies. When the central bank increases bank reserves, it’s recorded as an asset. However, if those reserves stem from borrowed funds, the corresponding liability (the loan principal) offsets the gain. The net effect on net foreign reserves is essentially neutral.

That said, these financial maneuvers aren’t entirely meaningless. Liberalizing imports and exports introduces transitional imbalances: the country needs immediate access to dollars for import purchases, while dollar inflows from exports typically lag. Ideally, exports would rise to compensate—but Argentina faces structural challenges on that front, including an overvalued peso and weak global commodity prices, both of which suppress export competitiveness.

President Milei is attempting a full-spectrum overhaul—pulling every economic lever available. But the system he inherited was already deeply entangled. Much of the fiscal deficit driving inflation stemmed from a mix of direct transfer programs (like social security, food aid, and scholarships) and indirect subsidies (energy, gas, and infrastructure). By slashing these to curb inflation, the government has inadvertently contracted domestic consumption, reduced employment, weakened tax revenues, and dampened import demand—all while a stronger peso further erodes the competitiveness of Argentine exports.

In short, it’s a high-risk balancing act with significant short-term costs and uncertain long-term outcomes.


 
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