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Argentine Treasury Secures USD 266 Million and Injects 3 Trillion Pesos

26/06/2026 22:03 - Economia

A Strategic Move for Financial Stability

In a significant effort to calm the markets, the Argentine Treasury executed a mixed strategy to manage its debt. Facing a major maturity of USD 4.3 billion in July, the government successfully raised fresh dollars while simultaneously releasing pesos into the local economy to alleviate liquidity stress.

For international observers, this maneuver is crucial: it shows the government's ability to finance itself in hard currency (dollars) while managing the local currency (pesos) supply to prevent a credit crunch.

Dollar Bond Placement

The centerpiece of the operation was the placement of the AO28 bond. The Treasury awarded USD 266 million at an effective annual rate (TIREA) of 7.83%.

This rate is lower than previous placements (which were around 8%), signaling growing investor confidence. A second round for an additional USD 100 million is scheduled for Monday, maintaining the same pricing terms.

Injecting Liquidity into the Market

In a shift from recent trends, the Treasury decided not to roll over 100% of its peso debt. Instead, it renewed only 81.26% of the maturing pesos.

This decision effectively released approximately 3 trillion pesos back into the financial system. The move aims to lower high overnight interest rates and provide breathing room for the local market.

Understanding the Instruments

The tender offered a variety of instruments to suit different investor needs. Here’s a breakdown for non-local readers:

  • LECAPs (Treasury Bills in Pesos): The most demanded instrument. The LECAP maturing in Nov 2026 captured $4.18 trillion at a monthly rate of 2.10%.
  • CER Bonds (Inflation-Linked): Instruments designed to protect against inflation. Placements included maturities in Oct 2027 (6.47% rate) and Mar 2028.
  • Dual Bonds: These pay rates based on either inflation (CER) or the exchange rate gap (TAMAR), offering a hedge against currency fluctuations.
  • Dollar Linked: Bonds indexed to the official dollar rate, totaling $570 billion and $120 billion for different maturities.

Consultancy firm Equilibra noted that extending the debt's average life to 1.81 years is a positive step, pushing significant payments toward 2028.

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