Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent at a press conference praising financial deals with Argentina, surrounded by flags and economic visuals.

Venture capitalist praises Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent’s leadership after Argentina swap move

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Guy Paul Nohra, a longtime life-sciences investor and co-founder of Alta Partners, uses a Daily Wire opinion piece to applaud Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent’s approach to financial stability and innovation, citing a new $20 billion currency-swap arrangement with Argentina and signs of a tentative biotech rebound.

In an Oct. 25 Daily Wire opinion column, venture capitalist Guy Paul Nohra argues that Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has provided a steadier policy backdrop for investors and innovators, pointing in particular to recent U.S. support for Argentina’s markets. (dailywire.com)

Nohra highlights the United States’ $20 billion currency swap framework with Argentina and a rare direct purchase of Argentine pesos — steps the Treasury said were intended to stabilize markets amid the country’s ongoing turmoil. The actions, announced this month, followed meetings in Washington with Economy Minister Luis Caputo and drew both praise in Buenos Aires and criticism from some U.S. lawmakers. (apnews.com)

Domestically, Nohra points to signals of fiscal restraint. Bessent said last week that the U.S. deficit for the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30, 2025, was smaller than the prior year and that the deficit-to-GDP ratio — which he said currently begins with a “five” — could be steered toward roughly 3% over time. Official figures were delayed amid a government shutdown. (reuters.com)

Nohra also ties improving sentiment in biotech to clearer policy signals. While he asserts private life-sciences funding is rising, broader third-party data show a mixed but improving picture: PitchBook-sourced figures compiled by Cushman & Wakefield indicate U.S. life-sciences VC investment rose about 16% in 2024 from 2023 levels, with momentum uneven across hubs. (cushwake.cld.bz)

On the banking front, Nohra cites Bessent’s recent message to community-bank leaders to embrace technology — including fintech and AI — and to “go on the offense” in competing for customers. Bessent delivered that call at the Federal Reserve’s Community Bank Conference on Oct. 9, where he detailed a regulatory agenda focused on tailoring and AML/CFT modernization. (home.treasury.gov)

The op-ed portrays Bessent as a market-tested operator shaped by years in global macro investing at Key Square Capital Management (also known as Key Square Group). Bessent, confirmed by the Senate in January as Treasury secretary in President Donald Trump’s second administration, has outlined targets of roughly 3% average GDP growth, deficits near 3% of GDP and an increase of about 3 million barrels per day in domestic oil production — goals Nohra endorses. (apnews.com)

Nohra, who co-founded the life-sciences firm Alta Partners and later helped launch Alta Life Sciences in Barcelona, frames U.S. engagement abroad — including with Argentina under President Javier Milei — as complementary to domestic priorities, arguing that stable global markets bolster supply chains and research collaboration. His column ultimately urges expanded R&D incentives and deeper public‑private partnerships to sustain U.S. competitiveness in health technology. (en.wikipedia.org)

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