Argentina's country risk rises to 516 basis points

Argentina's country risk closed on Thursday, February 5, 2026, at 516 basis points, up 14 units from the previous day, amid global volatility and the arrival of an IMF mission. Argentine assets on Wall Street fell up to 8.5%, while sovereign bonds showed mixed results. Experts attribute the rise mainly to international factors rather than local deteriorations.

The country risk indicator, compiled by JP Morgan, rose 2.8% on Thursday, February 5, 2026, closing at 516 basis points after starting the day at 502 and reaching a high of 520. This level marks the highest since January 25 and reflects an upward trend over the past week, from 496 points on January 30.

The trading session was marked by declines in Argentine stocks (ADRs) in New York, with drops of up to 8.5% in Supervielle and BBVA, and 8.2% in Grupo Galicia. In contrast, most dollar-denominated bonds reversed initial losses and traded higher, led by AL30 (+0.5%) and GD46 (+0.2%), though some like AL41 (-0.8%) and GD35 (-0.2%) closed lower. The local Merval index fell 2% to 1,985 points, with declines in BBVA (-5.9%) and Supervielle (-5.1%).

Global volatility, driven by nervousness in the U.S. tech sector over the impact of artificial intelligence on software companies, affected emerging markets. "The movement above 500 points responds more to a global portfolio rebalancing than to a specific deterioration in Argentina," explained Leo Anzalone, director of CEPEC, to Perfil. Domestically, the Central Bank accumulated nearly US$1,300 million in currency purchases this year, targeting US$10,000 million by the end of 2026, and a US$832 million payment to the IMF was made this week.

At the same time, an IMF technical mission arrived in Argentina for the second review of the agreement signed with Javier Milei's government in the first quarter of 2025. The delegation, led by Luis Cubeddu and Bikas Joshi, is assessing compliance with fiscal and economic targets amid the recent resignation of Marco Lavagna from INDEC and the suspension of a new inflation measurement methodology.

The country risk measures the premium that emerging market bonds pay over U.S. Treasuries, indicating investor perceptions of a country's repayment capacity. An elevated level like 516 points raises external financing costs and limits economic growth.

Liittyvät artikkelit

Illustration depicting Argentina's country risk dropping below 500 points for the first time in eight years, with rising reserves and investor optimism.
AI:n luoma kuva

Argentina's country risk breaks below 500 points after eight years

Raportoinut AI AI:n luoma kuva

Argentina's country risk indicator dropped to 494 basis points on January 27, 2026, its lowest level since May 2018, driven by rising sovereign bonds and the central bank's reserve accumulation. This decline signals growing investor optimism about the country's fiscal solvency. International reserves approach 46 billion dollars after daily net purchases.

Argentina's Country Risk closed on Thursday, February 19, 2026, at 524 basis points, up from the previous close of 515 points. This rise occurred amid a decline in dollar-denominated sovereign bonds, both locally and on Wall Street. The JP Morgan-measured indicator highlights market volatility and focus on the country's public accounts.

Raportoinut AI

Argentina's country risk indicator, compiled by JP Morgan, closed at 504 basis points on Monday, February 9, 2026, following a recovery day for sovereign bonds. The drop was driven by gains in dollar-denominated public securities and a stable exchange environment. The Central Bank built reserves exceeding 45 billion dollars.

Argentina's Central Bank announced on Monday, December 15, 2025, the first measures of its 2026 economic plan, including updating exchange rate bands according to inflation and a consistent program to accumulate international reserves. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) welcomed these decisions, aligned with its prior recommendations. Meanwhile, the National Treasury purchased 320 million dollars following the announcements.

Raportoinut AI

Six Wall Street financial entities identified Argentina as one of the most exposed emerging economies to an external shock, such as rising oil prices due to the Middle East conflict. Economy Minister Luis Caputo urged entrepreneurs to deposit dollars into the financial system at a forum in Mendoza. These vulnerabilities include low reserves and dependence on external financing.

Argentina's dollar blue closed on Friday March 27 at $1.395 for purchase and $1.415 for sale, down $10 during the day. Other financial dollar types hovered around $1.470. Country risk stood at 6,105 basis points.

Raportoinut AI

Argentina's central bank cut short-term reference rates to 20% this month, below inflation levels, to capitalize on dollar inflows and rebuild hard currency reserves. President Javier Milei's government aims to boost economic growth amid slowdown signals. Analysts note concerns over peso stability impacts.

 

 

 

Tämä verkkosivusto käyttää evästeitä

Käytämme evästeitä analyysiä varten parantaaksemme sivustoamme. Lue tietosuojakäytäntömme tietosuojakäytäntö lisätietoja varten.
Hylkää