|

IMF to Argentina: Is $50 Billion Enough?

On Thursday, June 7, the IMF authorized a 3-year Stand-by agreement with Argentina worth $50 billion. The agreement included typical measures on the fiscal deficit as well as more autonomy for the central bank.

Not $30 Billion, Not $40 Billion, It’s $50 Billion

When Argentina indicated several weeks ago that it was calling in for IMF help, analysts estimated the Stand-by agreement was going to be worth approximately $30 billion. However, on June 7, 2018 the Argentine government reported (and the IMF confirmed) a three-year Stand-by agreement worth $50 billion.

The agreement is a typical Stand-by agreement in the sense that it imposes conditions regarding the fiscal deficit, inflation, exchange rates, etc. At the same time, the agreement includes several measures that will give the central bank more autonomy in conducting monetary policy. But, perhaps the most notable news coming from this agreement is that it forbids the Argentine central bank to finance the Treasury; that is, the central bank will no longer be able to finance the fiscal deficit, which has been at the core of recent market volatility.

The government is dropping its inflation target rate of 15 percent for 2018. Thfinance the fiscal deficit, which has been at the core of recent market volatility.e executive branch determined the target until today, not the central bank. Congress is expected to give more autonomy to the central bank, such that the central bank, in consultation with the Treasury department, will determine the inflation target going forward. For 2019, the inflation target will be reinstated at 17 percent, with a 13 percent target for 2020 and a 9 percent target for 2021. Meanwhile, primary deficit estimates have been lowered to 2.7 percent of GDP in 2018, 1.3 percent in 2019 and 0.0 percent in 2020. According to the plan, debt as a percentage of GDP is expected to start to come down by 2019.

Is $50 Billion Enough?

The question is: is $50 billion enough to stabilize expectations and continue to move reforms forward? We think it has the potential to do the trick. However, it will depend on how international capital markets react to the news and if the central bank is able to contain inflationary expectations. As a back-of-the-envelope estimate, this package is as large as the one given to Mexico during the Tequila crisis in the mid-1990s, which, at the time, was worth about 10 percent of Mexican U.S. dollar GDP. This package is also in the same ballpark figure for Argentina now as that given to Mexico in then.

Furthermore, during the Tequila crisis the Mexican economy collapsed 6.2 percent. The situation in Argentina during the 2000-2001 crisis may have been a similar comparison to Mexico’s Tequila crisis, but today, nobody is expecting such a severe crisis in Argentina. Importantly, both Mexico in 1994 and Argentina in 2000 had relatively fixed exchange rates and both economies were not growing. Today, both economies have flexible exchange rates. The biggest risk today for Argentina is political, and that is no small change! For more a more detailed discussion regarding the Argentine economy, please see, “Argentina Gets a New Start: Is This Time Different?

Download The Full Economic Indicators

Author

More from Wells Fargo Research Team
Share:

Editor's Picks

EUR/USD holds firm near 1.1850 amid USD weakness

EUR/USD remains strongly bid around 1.1850 in European trading on Monday. The USD/JPY slide-led broad US Dollar weakness helps the pair build on Friday's recovery ahead of the Eurozone Sentix Investor Confidence data for February. 

GBP/USD hovers near 1.3600 as UK government crisis weighs on Pound Sterling

GBP/USD moves sideways after registering modest gains in the previous session, trading around 1.3610 during the European hours on Monday. The pair could come under pressure as the Pound Sterling may weaken amid a fresh government crisis in the United Kingdom.

Gold remains supported by China's buying and USD weakness as traders eye US data

Gold struggles to capitalize on its intraday move up and remains below the $5,100 mark heading into the European session amid mixed cues. Data released over the weekend showed that the People's Bank of China extended its buying spree for a 15th month in January. Moreover, dovish US Fed expectations and concerns about the central bank's independence drag the US Dollar lower for the second straight day, providing an additional boost to the non-yielding yellow metal.

Cardano steadies as whale selling caps recovery

Cardano (ADA) steadies at $0.27 at the time of writing on Monday after slipping more than 5% in the previous week. On-chain data indicate a bearish trend, with certain whales offloading ADA. However, the technical outlook suggests bearish momentum is weakening, raising the possibility of a short-term relief rebound if buying interest picks up.

Japanese PM Takaichi nabs unprecedented victory – US data eyed this week

I do not think I would be exaggerating to say that Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s snap general election gamble paid off over the weekend – and then some. This secured the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) an unprecedented mandate just three months into her tenure.

Bitcoin, Ethereum and Ripple consolidate after massive sell-off

Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Ripple prices consolidated on Monday after correcting by nearly 9%, 8%, and 10% in the previous week, respectively. BTC is hovering around $70,000, while ETH and XRP are facing rejection at key levels. Traders should be cautious: despite recent stabilization, upside recovery for these top three cryptocurrencies is capped as the broader trend remains bearish.