BCRA Reserves Hit Milei-Era High Amid 2026 Accumulation Push

Argentina's central bank gross international reserves reached USD 43.610 million on Friday, the highest since President Javier Milei's term began, building on the 2026 accumulation plan announced earlier this month. Driven by gold revaluation and Treasury purchases, this strengthens the position ahead of a USD 4,200 million debt maturity on January 9.

Following the BCRA's December 15 announcement of its 2026 economic plan—which includes updating exchange rate bands with inflation and a structured reserve accumulation program targeting up to USD 17 billion—gross international reserves hit USD 43.610 million on Friday, up USD 596 million from Thursday and surpassing the prior Milei-era peak of USD 43.014 million in August 2025. The weekly gain totaled USD 1.197 million, boosted by revaluation of 1.98 million ounces of gold at USD 4,561 per ounce.

This buildup precedes a USD 4,200 million debt maturity on January 9. Economy Minister Luis Caputo confirmed nearly USD 900 million in acquisitions outside the Mercado Libre de Cambios (MLC). Treasury dollar deposits at the BCRA surged from USD 97 million to nearly USD 2,000 million between December 4 and Wednesday, via USD 630 million in market purchases, USD 360 million net inflows from organizations like the Inter-American Development Bank, and USD 910 million from the BONAR 2029N placement.

Signed contracts this week for the Comahue hydroelectric dams concession (Alicurá, El Chocón, Piedra del Águila, Cerros Colorados) could add USD 700 million, potentially reducing the January shortfall to USD 1,700 million if funds arrive promptly. December saw the Economy Ministry net USD 408 million in MLC purchases, averaging USD 29 million daily versus November's USD 16 million.

Economist Gonzalo Martínez Mosquera noted, 'the market takes it for granted that those maturities will be paid,' but cautioned about private sector strain as 'the Government avoids a fiscal deficit, forcing the private sector to borrow.' These steps underscore efforts to maintain exchange rate and fiscal stability amid challenges.

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Illustration depicting Argentina's Central Bank president announcing the 2026 reserve accumulation plan, with rising reserve graphs and IMF approval.
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Central bank announces reserve accumulation plan for 2026

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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.

Argentina's Central Bank bought US$55 million on January 12, its sixth consecutive daily purchase since January 5 under the 2026 accumulation plan announced in December, bringing the total to US$273 million. Gross reserves climbed to a new Milei-era high of US$44.768 million amid stable exchange rates.

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Following the Central Bank's December 2025 announcement of its 2026 economic plan, the new exchange rate flotation scheme—adjusting dollar bands by past inflation—took effect on January 2, 2026. The BCRA aims to accumulate reserves amid market anticipation of quote shifts, while economist Martín Redrado warns the system is transitory without clearer policy definitions.

The Finance Secretariat called an auction to renew nearly $15 trillion in debt on November 26. The Central Bank cut interest rates to 20% TNA and eased bank reserve requirements to encourage bond purchases. These steps aim to absorb liquidity, extend maturities, and boost economic activity.

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Colombia's financial market anticipates that the Banco de la República will raise its interest rate at the January 30, 2026 meeting, according to a Citi survey. Out of 25 consulted entities, 17 expect an adjustment to 9.75%, while only five foresee it staying at 9.5%. This outlook is driven by the minimum wage increase and inflation projected at 5.8%.

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.

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Building on its strong 2025 performance as the fourth strongest emerging currency, the Colombian peso has appreciated 3.8% in the first 14 days of January 2026, leading the pack. It outperforms the Chilean peso (2.8%) and Argentine peso (1%), driven by government external debt issuance and favorable US inflation data.

 

 

 

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