19/06/2026 16:24 - Economia
Gráfico de torta mostrando la composición de reservas y una moneda de dólar en primer plano, ilustrando la igualdad de cotizaciones.
The Argentine foreign exchange market is celebrating a historic milestone this Friday, June 19, 2026. In a surprising turn of events, the exchange rate gap—historically a symbol of economic uncertainty—has practically disappeared. The official dollar and the 'blue' dollar (the informal parallel rate) converged at the same selling price: $1,480 Argentine Pesos.
For foreigners following the Argentine economy, the 'Blue Dollar' is the informal exchange rate for cash dollars traded in the parallel market. Historically, due to strict capital controls (known locally as the 'cepo'), this rate was significantly higher than the official rate. A narrowing gap like the one seen today suggests that locals and investors have confidence in the official monetary policy, reducing the need to seek dollars on the black market.
| Dollar Type | Buy | Sell |
|---|---|---|
| Official (BNA) | $1,430 | $1,480 |
| Blue Dollar | $1,460 | $1,480 |
| Wholesale | - | $1,462 |
| Card Dollar | - | $1,924 |
| MEP (Electronic) | - | $1,476 |
*Values refer to the close of June 19, 2026.
This stability is underpinned by strong fundamentals. May 2026 registered a record trade surplus of u$s3,504 million, driven by a 34% surge in exports and a 7% drop in imports. This influx of foreign currency strengthens the Central Bank's position.
Furthermore, the wholesale dollar, which guides the official rate, rose 0.76% on Friday, accumulating a 3.1% increase in June—outpacing estimated inflation of 2.1%. This 'crawling peg' strategy is successfully absorbing excess liquidity.
While the market celebrates, MSCI decided to maintain Argentina in the 'standalone' category, delaying its reclassification to emerging market status. Despite this, the country risk remains low at around 430 basis points, the lowest in eight years.
With the 'cepo' (capital controls) relaxed and inflation decelerating, the outlook for the second half of 2026 is positive. The external scenario also helps: a peace agreement in the Middle East and lower oil prices create a favorable environment for Argentine imports.
Alfredo S. Quiroga