24/06/2026 10:11 - Economia
MSCI Inc. (Morgan Stanley Capital International) is one of the world's leading providers of global equity indices, used by institutional investors worldwide to guide investment decisions. When MSCI classifies a country as a "Standalone Market", it means the country is considered too risky or inaccessible for mainstream international investment portfolios. This is the lowest category in MSCI's system, below Frontier Markets and Emerging Markets.
Argentina has been in this category since 2021, when it was downgraded from emerging market status due to capital controls implemented in September 2019. Other countries in the Standalone category include Panama, Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago, Malta, Bosnia, Palestine, Nigeria, Zimbabwe, Lebanon, and Ukraine.
MSCI cited several obstacles preventing Argentina's upgrade:
If Argentina achieves emerging market status:
USD 4.5 billion
Estimated potential investment inflows
Eric Ritondale, analyst at Puente (a leading Argentine financial services firm), estimates that Argentina could potentially ascend to emerging market status around 2028, provided the country demonstrates that capital market normalization is permanent and not easily reversible.
Companies that would benefit most: YPF (state-controlled energy company), Grupo Financiero Galicia (leading financial institution), and Vista Oil & Gas (oil and gas exploration company).
Argentina stands out as the only major Latin American economy in the Standalone category, while its neighbors enjoy emerging market status:
| Country | MSCI Category | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Argentina | Standalone | Downgraded in 2021 due to capital controls |
| Brazil | Emerging | Latin America's largest economy |
| Chile | Emerging | Copper exporter, stable market |
| México | Emerging | NAFTA partner, manufacturing hub |
| Colombia | Emerging | Growing economy, oil producer |
| Peru | Emerging | Mining-focused economy |
Following MSCI's announcement, Argentine assets experienced a negative performance on trading sessions:
Wall Street ADRs:
Drops up to 4.4%
Edenor: -4.4%
Grupo Galicia: -3.9%
YPF: -3.5%
ADRs (American Depositary Receipts) allow foreign investors to trade Argentine companies on US exchanges.
Country Risk Index:
+2.85% to 433 points
Highest increase in 1.5 months
Country risk measures the premium investors demand to hold Argentine debt versus US Treasuries. Higher numbers indicate greater perceived risk.
S&P Merval Index:
-0.9% (pesos) / -3% (dollars)
Buenos Aires stock exchange
The Merval is Argentina's main stock index, tracking the most liquid companies on the Buenos Aires Stock Exchange.
MSCI requires clear evidence that foreign investors can freely invest capital, trade local assets, access the foreign exchange market, and repatriate funds without significant restrictions. The key requirement is that any normalization must be permanent and not easily reversible. Argentina already meets size and liquidity criteria; the main obstacle remains market accessibility for international investors.
Source: Based on MSCI's annual market classification review and analyst reports from Puente financial services. For more information about MSCI's methodology, visit their official market classification framework documentation.
Alfredo S. Quiroga