Argentina's country risk index, produced by JP Morgan, dropped to 567 basis points at the close on Thursday, April 30, 2026. The 1.05% daily decline aligned with a rebound in sovereign bonds. The index reflects increased demand for fixed-income assets amid focus on fiscal matters.
The EMBI Global Diversified index opened April 30 at 573 points, per Rava Bursátil data, reaching that as the intraday high. Buoyed by buying orders in sovereign bonds, it fell to a low of 567 points, stabilizing there toward 18:46. This marks a 6-point improvement from the April 29 close at 573 points.
The prior week saw volatility in the country risk. It rose to 582 points on April 27 and closed at 584 on April 28, with an intraday high of 593. Recovery began April 29 at 573 points, with Infobae reporting stretches at 566 points, aided by a bond rebound and Wall Street selectivity.
Emilse Córdoba stated: “The investor is already starting to think about next year's political scenario.” The index measures the spread over U.S. Treasury bonds, with 567 points equating to a 5.67% premium, indicating market views on Argentina's sovereign debt repayment capacity.
The decline solidifies a monthly-end recovery trend, despite elevated weekly averages and caution over earnings and international rates. Fiscal discipline has provided support.