Argentina’s New Presidential Decree: Market Caution and Public Outcry

Argentina presidential decree met with market caution, public protests
©⁣ Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Argentina’s President Javier Milei addresses supporters⁣ from the Casa Rosada balcony, as his sister Karina ⁤Milei and his ‌partner Fatima Florez look‌ on, after his swearing-in ceremony, in Buenos⁢ Aires, Argentina December 10, 2023. REUTERS/Agust

By Lucinda Elliott and Jorge Otaola

Excitement embraced Argentina as sovereign debt rose on Thursday ⁣and stocks dipped after early gains, as‍ market participants cautiously⁤ welcomed an emergency presidential decree ⁤ending limits on exports and taking other‌ steps ‍to deregulate an ailing economy.

Attention now‌ turns to congress, which has power ⁣to strike down the decree signed by new libertarian president Javier Milei ⁢late on‍ Wednesday⁣ while ⁢people protested against sweeping austerity measures and demanded financial support for the poor.

Thousands of Argentines took to the streets for a second day on Thursday to oppose the decree. Local media⁤ broadcast images of crowds banging pots ⁢and pans in protest in cities such as ⁣Rosario,‌ Mar del Plata, Córdoba and the capital Buenos Aires.

Ahead ‌of the demonstrations, the Buenos Aires S&P Merval index⁢ dipped into negative territory ‍after strong opening gains, while over-the-counter ‍sovereign ⁣debt advanced⁢ 2.9% after initially climbing ‍as much as 4%.

Bond spreads -⁣ the premium investors demand to buy​ Argentine​ debt rather ‍than‍ U.S. – have narrowed to near their tightest ​since early February, as investors​ grew more confident of the⁢ government’s ability to meet debt obligations.

The ‌complex decree mandates more than 300 measures. It must be⁢ sent to a⁤ legislative Bicameral Commission, and if the commission deems the decree constitutional,⁣ it will remain in force unless both houses of congress vote it down.

“Investors are going to be keeping a close eye on ⁣the reaction of lawmakers who have the⁢ power to block the proposals,” said Bruno Gennari at⁤ London-based fixed-income⁤ bank KNG Securities.

Broadly, the measures​ announced were in line with what investors anticipated: “It is unlikely that we’ll see‍ much of⁢ a price impact on bonds in response,” Gennari said.

Milei’s coalition, La Libertad‌ Avanza, holds only 15% of⁣ lower house seats and less than 10% of the senate. Analysts have said proposing changes through laws approved by ‍congress rather than by decree would have been a less destabilizing approach.

The president, who has pledged‍ economic “shock therapy”, told local media on Thursday the measures were “unfriendly” but necessary to fix macroeconomic ‍imbalance. ​The country is ⁢battling recession, triple-digit annual inflation and a growing poverty rate.

Argentina was due on Thursday to make a $900 million payment to the International Monetary Fund (IMF), which⁤ it plans to settle using a $960 million bridge loan from CAF – Development Bank of Latin America and the Caribbean – approved on Dec. 15.

It‌ previously had to use‌ a swapline with China’s central ‍bank as ⁤well as a loan from Qatar to⁣ make IMF payments on ​time.

Earlier on Wednesday,

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