22/06/2026 10:26 - Economia
Billetes de dólar estadounidense en primer plano con gráficos financieros digitales de fondo azul, representando el mercado cambiario argentino
Argentina's foreign exchange market witnessed a historic milestone on Monday, June 22, 2026: for the first time in years, the 'blue dollar' (the informal black market rate) and the official exchange rate converged at the same selling price of $1,480 pesos per US dollar.
For foreigners unfamiliar with Argentina's currency system: the 'dólar blue' is the unofficial exchange rate determined by parallel markets. Historically, Argentina has maintained strict currency controls, creating a significant gap between the official rate (set by the government) and the parallel market rate. When these rates converge, it typically indicates successful economic stabilization policies.
| Type | Buy | Sell |
|---|---|---|
| Official | $1,430 | $1,480 |
| Blue (Black Market) | - | $1,480 |
| Crypto Dollar | - | $1,531.02 |
When the parallel market rate drops while the official rate rises in a controlled manner, both prices can meet in the middle. This is exactly what happened: the blue dollar fell by $5 pesos in the last trading session, while the official rate increased by $10 pesos, both settling at $1,480.
This phenomenon typically occurs in contexts of macroeconomic stability where devaluation expectations are contained, and public demand for dollars remains stable. For Argentina, this represents significant progress in normalizing its currency market.
The crypto dollar, obtained through stablecoins like USDT and USDC on digital platforms, trades at $1,531.02, maintaining a slight premium above both formal and informal markets. This premium reflects transaction costs and market liquidity factors.
Bitcoin also shows strength, rising 2% to $64,649, driven by the bullish trend in international cryptocurrency markets.
For decades, Argentina's currency gap was a symbol of economic instability, sometimes exceeding 100%. When blue and official rates equalize, it signals:
Argentina's Central Bank (BCRA) reported that household delinquency rates reached 12.1% in April 2026, the highest level since 2004. This means approximately 5.3 million people have loans in irregular payment status.
However, authorities emphasized that the pace of growth is slowing, with only a 0.5 percentage point increase from March—a significant improvement compared to increases recorded in previous months.
Household Loan Delinquency
(April 2026 - Highest since 2004)USD 47,508 million
Solid backing level425 basis points
Lowest since April 20182.1%
Deceleration trend
Alfredo S. Quiroga