Photorealistic depiction of Argentina's Central Bank with exchange rate bands display and building reserves, economists discussing outside amid market buzz.
Photorealistic depiction of Argentina's Central Bank with exchange rate bands display and building reserves, economists discussing outside amid market buzz.
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Argentina's Exchange Rate Bands Scheme Takes Effect as Reserves Build

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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.

Argentina's new exchange scheme, announced on December 15, 2025, as part of the BCRA's 2026 strategy, began operating on January 2, 2026. It updates dollar bands based on inflation from two months prior, per INDEC data, replacing the prior fixed 1% monthly adjustment. For instance, November's 2.5% inflation could lift the band ceiling from $1,526 to around $1,564 by late January, according to private estimates.

The current floor stands at $916 and ceiling at $1,526, with BCRA interventions limited to 5% of traded volume if breached. Recently, the BCRA has sold dollars, underscoring market pressures, noted former BCRA president Martín Redrado in a radio Rivadavia interview. He described the scheme as 'by definition, a transitory system' and urged definitions in exchange, financial, and monetary policies for investment and production stability.

On January 1, with markets closed, the crypto dollar was at $1,536 (highest), followed by blue ($1,530 sell), CCL ($1,520.47), and MEP ($1,480.74). The wholesale dollar ended 2025 at $1,455. Redrado highlighted a widening gap—the official dollar up 5 cents, blue up 40—while positives include wheat harvest liquidation yielding nearly $800 million surplus and strong soy prospects in April.

Challenges persist, including a $4.2 billion January bond payment. Redrado cautioned that inflation-driven bands fuel expectations, advocating tax reforms to boost wages and consumption: 'The best non-inflationary way to improve purchasing power is to lower work taxes.'

Ohun tí àwọn ènìyàn ń sọ

Initial reactions on X to Argentina's new BCRA exchange rate bands scheme, effective January 2, 2026, are predominantly neutral media explanations of the inflation-adjusted mechanism aimed at reserve accumulation. Economists like Martín Redrado express skepticism, calling it transitory without clearer policies. User replies show negative sentiments, doubting stability and predicting dollar jumps.

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Argentina's Central Bank building with digital display announcing record US$457 million dollar purchase, rising reserves, and positive net reserves for a finance news article.
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Argentina's central bank makes largest dollar purchase in two years

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Argentina's Central Bank (BCRA) bought US$457 million on Friday, April 10, its largest purchase in two years. Gross international reserves reached US$45.431 million, with net reserves turning positive at US$323 million. The official dollar closed lower at $1.395 for sale at Banco Nación.

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.

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According to the Central Bank's Market Expectations Survey (REM), analysts project a gradual rise in the official exchange rate starting April 2026. The median estimate places the dollar at $1.452 in April, with moderate monthly increases. This adjustment will depend on inflation, economic policies, and external factors.

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