08/07/2026 10:28 - Economia
The Argentine financial market is at a crucial crossroads, closely watching signals from the US Federal Reserve (Fed) and the first local inflation reading for June 2026. According to the Market Expectations Survey (REM) conducted by the Central Bank of Argentina (BCRA), published on July 6 with input from 44 economists, inflation is projected at 2% for June and July, descending to 1.8% for August and September. This deceleration is encouraging data for the national government's economic stability strategy.
The foreign exchange market shows remarkable stability. As of the close on July 7, 2026, the official exchange rate at Banco Nación (Argentina's largest public bank) stood at $1,465 (buy) and $1,515 (sell) per US dollar. Meanwhile, the dólar blue (the informal parallel exchange rate widely used by locals) remained stable at $1,515. The dólar MEP (a legal dollar purchased through the stock market) saw a slight 0.11% increase, sitting at $1,527.48, and the crypto dollar at $1,598.72. A historic and positive milestone is that the BCRA's gross reserves surpassed USD 49 billion, their highest level since 2019, following an USD 81 million purchase in the market.
The country risk (a financial indicator measuring the probability of a sovereign default, calculated by comparing Argentine bonds with US Treasury bonds) experienced a significant drop, settling at 405 basis points, its lowest level since 2018. Regarding the future of the exchange rate, the REM projects the wholesale dollar at $1,482 for July and $1,673 for December 2026. The Top 10 consulting economists project a slightly lower year-end quote of $1,621. Meanwhile, the Matba-Rofex futures exchange projects the dollar at $1,500.50 for the end of July and $1,643 for December.
The Minister of Economy, Luis Caputo, recently presented the 2026/2027 financial program, generating great optimism in the markets. For 2026, financing needs are estimated at USD 19.2 billion, with funding sources of USD 22.9 billion, leaving a surplus cushion of USD 3.7 billion. For 2027, needs and sources would balance at USD 24.9 billion. In this context, on July 15, 2026, the Bonar 2029 (an Argentine sovereign bond maturing in 2029, ticker AO29) will debut with a cap of USD 2 billion at a 6% annual rate and monthly payments. Argentine stocks (ADRs - certificates representing shares of foreign stocks traded on Wall Street) responded positively, with gains of up to 7.4%, driven by the announcement.
The financial outlook presents challenges but holds promising perspectives for wage recovery and inflation control, maintaining the hope that Argentina will achieve investment grade status in the future.
Alfredo S. Quiroga