Central Bank cuts reserves by 5 points to boost credit

Argentina's Central Bank (BCRA) decided to cut bank reserve requirements by five percentage points starting in April, freeing up liquidity for banks to issue more loans amid recession. Led by Santiago Bausili, the move aims to revive economic activity without derailing inflation control. Analysts note the shift to a more expansionary policy after months of monetary contraction.

The Board of Argentina's Central Bank (BCRA), led by Santiago Bausili, resolved to reduce bank reserve requirements by 5 percentage points from April. This means that for sight deposits such as checking and savings accounts, the rate will drop from 50% to 45%, allowing banks to immobilize fewer funds and access more liquidity for private sector and consumer lending, as reported by Canal E and Perfil. Banks can cover 31.5% in cash and the rest with public debt bonds. The measure marks a shift in monetary policy by not renewing an August provision—extended in November—that had raised reserves to their highest level in three decades until March 31. Economists note that “the reserve cut will allow greater liquidity,” potentially leading to more loans after months of contraction where the monetary base fell in real terms. Private sector credit grew just 0.2%, with declines in personal loans (-0.2%) and credit card financing (-0.9%), worsened by delinquency exceeding 10%. However, freeing liquidity raises inflation risks. March saw 3.1% inflation, above wage growth, and external factors like rising oil prices add pressure. The BCRA faces the challenge of stimulating the economy without unanchoring price expectations, in a remonetization context to support consumption and investment.

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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 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.

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The Central Bank of the Republic of Argentina (BCRA) purchased US$42 million in the foreign exchange market, extending its streak to 30 consecutive days of currency acquisitions. Gross international reserves reached US$45.158 million, up US$102 million from the previous day. Since the start of the year, the BCRA has added purchases totaling US$2.089 million, including US$932 million in February.

Ethiopia's National Bank has raised reserve requirements for banks and eliminated the minimum savings rate to control inflation and manage excess liquidity. These measures were approved by the Monetary Policy Committee on December 29, 2025. The actions aim to support a shift toward single-digit inflation targets.

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The Banco de la República decided to keep the interest rate at 9.25% for October 2025, citing inflation rising for the third consecutive month. President Gustavo Petro reacted by stating that rates will only fall with the next board appointment. Manager Leonardo Villar clarified that the next appointment is scheduled for February 2029.

Colombia's Banco de la República raised its intervention rate by 100 basis points to 10.25%—the highest in over a year—in its first 2026 board meeting, citing persistent inflation above 5% for nearly six months and unanchored expectations from a 23.8% minimum wage hike decreed by President Petro's government. The decision, with a split 4-2-1 vote, drew market surprise and government criticism over economic contraction risks.

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The dollar exchange rate has fallen by $55 since the start of the year, despite the Central Bank's purchases adding over US$1,600 million to its reserves. Financial quotations are also losing ground in this context.

 

 

 

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