Central Bank fines $18 billion financial firm linked to Chiqui Tapia

Argentina's Central Bank (BCRA) has fined ARS Cambios SAS, operating as Sur Finanzas and linked to AFA president Claudio “Chiqui” Tapia, 18 billion pesos and banned it from currency exchange operations. The firm conducted over US$25 million in foreign currency transactions from January to December 2023 without verifiable genuine destinations for the funds. Its administrator and her son face individual fines and bans from financial roles.

The BCRA found that ARS Cambios SAS, run by financiers Ariel Vallejo and Graciela Beatriz Vallejo, conducted foreign currency buy-sell operations with other exchange houses totaling over US$25 million in 2023. “The entirety of the foreign currency acquired and resold by the supervised entity did not have a genuine destination for sale to clients in the official free exchange market, but rather constituted a ‘handover’ of pesos and dollars without apparent economic justification,” the monetary authority stated.

The firm must refrain from currency exchange activities. Graciela Beatriz Vallejo, titular administrator and sole shareholder, was fined 7.228 billion pesos and disqualified for six years. Her son, Ariel Vallejo, also an administrator, received a 5.429 billion peso fine and five-year disqualification from roles in financial entities, including banks, virtual wallets, and fintechs.

It was also penalized for exceeding monthly foreign currency sales limits in December 2023, January, and February 2024. With a 102% exchange gap, the BCRA estimates participants gained around US$25.878 million. The sanctioned parties have 30 business days to appeal to the National Chamber of Federal Administrative Appeals.

Ariel Vallejo faces questioning on May 5 for alleged illicit money laundering association from 2020 to 2025, with investigated ties to Tapia, as Vallejo himself admitted.

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Dramatic courtroom illustration of AFA president Tapia and treasurer Toviggino facing tax evasion charges, featuring hidden cash in a sock drawer.
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Justice processes Tapia and Toviggino for alleged tax evasion at AFA

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A judge has processed AFA president Claudio 'Chiqui' Tapia and treasurer Pablo Toviggino for alleged tax evasion, ordering embargoes. Diego Amarante argued that Tapia controls fiscal keys and signed balances since 2017. A chat is under investigation regarding US$300,000 allegedly hidden in a sock drawer.

Judge María Servini ordered a preventive embargo of 859.516 billion pesos on the assets of Elías Piccirillo and other currency exchange operators. The step was taken at the request of prosecutor Carlos Stornelli in a probe into alleged irregular dollar blue operations during Alberto Fernández's government.

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Argentina's Central Bank of the Republic (BCRA) purchased US$48 million in foreign currency on March 27, raising year-to-date acquisitions since January to US$4.037 billion. Gross international reserves reached US$43.712 billion, up US$176 million from the previous day.

Justice officials accessed the phone of Martín Migueles, partner of Wanda Nara, revealing a network that charged 10 to 15 percent bribes to speed up import authorizations through the SIRA system during Alberto Fernández's government.

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In a development following leaked chats exposing specific transfers to ghost companies, Prosecutor Pedro Simón from Santiago del Estero has verified $4.961 billion in payments from the Argentine Football Association (AFA) to firms linked to treasurer Pablo Toviggino between 2022 and 2025—for services never provided. Some funds were invested, generating millions in peso and dollar gains.

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