Argentine Peso Falls Despite US Bailout
Argentine Peso Falls Despite US Bailout
The Argentine peso has fallen below the level it reached before the US Treasury began purchases earlier this month, in a sign that the Trump administration’s financial support is failing to halt the currency’s slide ahead of a crucial election for libertarian president Javier Milei.
The peso dropped almost 1 per cent in early trading on Monday to 1,476 against the dollar, touching a fresh record intraday low, before paring its losses. The level is close to the bottom of an exchange rate band adopted in April.
The slide has resumed despite three purchases of pesos by the US Treasury since October 9 — which Argentine economists estimate total roughly $400mn, although neither government has confirmed the figure — as well as the announcement of a $20bn currency swap line between the two countries.
Argentina’s central bank confirmed the signing of the swap agreement on Monday. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.
Milei’s pro-business government has struggled to end severe market turmoil that began last month after it suffered defeat in key local elections. Analysts say US support, led by Treasury secretary Scott Bessent, has failed to quell demand for dollars from Argentine investors who are hedging against the possibility of a bad result for Milei at critical midterm legislative elections on October 26.
Investors are concerned that Milei may be forced to devalue the peso from its exchange rate band after the vote as the central bank’s hard currency reserves run low. The monetary authority has less than $5bn in reserves excluding liabilities, according to Argentine economic consultancy Romano Group.
“The market’s demand for dollars has been very strong and is going to continue that way until we have the election results and more clarity on the exchange rate,” said Salvador Vitelli, Romano’s head of research.
Offshore bets on the future path of the peso, known as non-deliverable forwards, have been pricing in accelerated depreciation in the currency outside Argentina’s official band.
Bessent said in a television interview earlier this month that the peso was “undervalued” and that he intended to “buy low and sell high”.
Pricing for two-month forwards on Monday implied that the peso could weaken below 1,600 to the dollar by then.
Dollar-denominated Argentine government bonds strengthened slightly on Monday. But they remain well below the prices hit immediately after the initial US intervention to prop up Argentina’s currency was announced.
GOP Candidate Stabbed by Anti-ICE Mob
Jan 19, 2026
2 min
Pentagon Readies 1,500 Troops for Minnesota
Jan 19, 2026
1 min
Anti-ICE Mob Storms Minnesota Church
Jan 19, 2026
2 min
EU Calls Emergency Meeting Over Trump Tariffs
Jan 19, 2026
5 min
Spain: 39 Dead in High-Speed Train Crash
Jan 19, 2026
3 min
US Kills Al‑Qaeda Leader Linked to Syria Ambush
Jan 19, 2026
2 min
FBI Captures Top 10 Most Wanted Fugitive
Jan 19, 2026
2 min
Piers Morgan Hospitalized with Broken Hip
Jan 19, 2026
1 min
Judge Bans ICE From Arresting MN Protesters
Jan 17, 2026
1 min
DOJ Probes Walz, Frey for Impeding ICE
Jan 17, 2026
1 min
Charles Wall Named ICE Deputy Director
Jan 17, 2026
2 min
Cohen: I Was Coerced to Frame Trump
Jan 17, 2026
3 min
Trump Unveils New Healthcare Affordability Plan
Jan 17, 2026
3 min
Mossad Chief in US for Iran Talks
Jan 17, 2026
2 min
Machado Gifts Trump Her Nobel Peace Prize
Jan 17, 2026
3 min
DOJ Launches Criminal Probe Into Jerome Powell
Jan 12, 2026
1 min
Report: Trump Orders Greenland Invasion Plans
Jan 12, 2026
2 min
Iran Death Toll Hits 500, 10K Arrested
Jan 12, 2026
3 min
Trump Weighs Potential Military Intervention in Iran
Jan 12, 2026
2 min
Judge Blocks Trump’s Mail-In Voting Restrictions
Jan 12, 2026
2 min

