Illustration depicting New York appeals court overturning $16B YPF expropriation ruling, with President Milei celebrating Argentina's victory.
Illustration depicting New York appeals court overturning $16B YPF expropriation ruling, with President Milei celebrating Argentina's victory.
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New York appeals court annuls YPF expropriation ruling against Argentina

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The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in New York overturned on Friday the first-instance ruling ordering Argentina to pay over $16 billion for the 2012 YPF expropriation. President Javier Milei hailed the decision as a historic victory and criticized former Kirchnerist officials. The ruling averts a massive payout, though Burford Capital said it will appeal.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in New York annulled on March 27, 2026, Judge Loretta Preska's 2023 ruling, which had ordered Argentina to pay about $16.1 billion plus interest for failing to make a public acquisition offer (OPA) to minority shareholders after the 2012 expropriation of 51% of YPF under Cristina Fernández de Kirchner's government.

In a 2-1 decision, the court deemed it a sovereign act, not a commercial breach, invalidating New York jurisdiction over Argentine law. The defense, led by the Procuración del Tesoro and Sullivan & Cromwell's Robert Giuffra Jr., argued misinterpretation of local law.

Javier Milei celebrated on X: "Ganamos en el juicio de YPF...!!!TMAP.MAGA.VLLC!". In a national address, he equated it to "70 million minimum pensions" and blamed Kirchner and Axel Kicillof for a "suicidal adventure" causing 12 years without investments. He announced a bill to amend the expropriation law. Manuel Adorni stated: "Ganamos: la Justicia de los Estados Unidos anuló la condena por el caso YPF".

The Procuración del Tesoro called it "historic magnitude", thanking Milei, María Ibarzábal Murphy, Luis Caputo, Pablo Quirno, and others. YPF was cleared of responsibility.

Burford Capital, which funded Eton Park and Petersen's claim, criticized the ruling and plans to appeal; its shares plunged. YPF shares rose 3% in New York.

Axel Kicillof demanded Milei "apologize" for backing "vulture funds". Alberto Fernández quipped: "‘Ganamos’, dijo el mosquito". PRO claimed credit for 2017 arguments.

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Reactions on X to the US appeals court annulling the YPF expropriation ruling are polarized. President Javier Milei celebrated it as a historic victory for his government, criticizing Kirchnerist policies. Opposition leaders like Axel Kicillof defended the 2012 expropriation as a sovereign success and accused Milei of siding with vulture funds previously. Supporters of both sides claim vindication, with high engagement from political figures and media accounts.

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Steve Forbes advocates for Milei's Argentina reforms, illustrated with dollarization symbols, justice scales, and optimistic investors against Buenos Aires skyline.
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Steve Forbes says Milei’s Argentina must follow through on dollarization and rule-of-law tests to sustain investor confidence

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In a Daily Wire opinion column, Steve Forbes argues that President Javier Milei’s economic program in Argentina amounts to a “restoration of economic freedom” after decades of state intervention, but says the reform push will be tested by Milei’s plans for dollarization, investor outreach events in Miami and New York, and how Argentina handles high-stakes legal disputes tied to the 2012 YPF nationalization.

Following the U.S. appeals court's recent annulment of a $16 billion YPF expropriation ruling, Argentina gains partial relief from international litigation pressures. However, claims exceeding US$10 billion persist in cases involving debt, GDP-linked bonds, holdouts, Aerolíneas Argentinas, and related matters, amid reported government infighting.

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The Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation decided to intervene in the case filed by La Pampa against the National State over the distribution of National Treasury Contributions. The highest court gave the government 60 days to respond.

Argentine assets came under pressure on Friday, May 15, as country risk rose 2.5 percent to 538 basis points. The S&P Merval fell 1.4 percent in pesos and most ADRs closed in the red.

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President Gustavo Petro sharply criticized the State Council's suspension of a $25 trillion AFP-to-Colpensiones transfer under Decree 415, now limited to about $5 trillion, accusing business leaders of theft if they withhold the funds. Asofondos pushes for full decree suspension amid ongoing legal battle.

The National Government filed an appeal before the Council of State to reverse the provisional suspension of a $25 trillion transfer from private funds to Colpensiones. The precautionary measure was issued on April 28 against Decree 415 of 2026. The ministries defend the decree's legality within the pension reform framework.

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Lawmaker Lilita Carrió celebrated the Arca audit of the Argentine Football Association (AFA) and stated that its leaders, Chiqui Tapia and Pablo Toviggino, will end up in prison. This comes amid judicial investigations and AFA's domicile change to Buenos Aires province to evade national oversight. Construction has begun on a Pilar plot, as a judge replaces another in the case involving a mansion.

 

 

 

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