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Argentina Secures $20 Billion IMF Deal Amid Economic Stabilization Efforts

Argentina’s Economy Minister Luis Caputo announced a $20 billion loan agreement with the International Monetary Fund on Thursday.

The announcement marks the first official confirmation of the deal size after months of negotiations between the IMF and President Javier Milei’s administration. The $20 billion figure appears in line with recent expectations.

Bloomberg reported as early as March 21 that the IMF would consider a four-year extended fund facility worth approximately 15 billion Special Drawing Rights, equivalent to about $20 billion.

Caputo mentioned that some local media had actually reported lower figures, which contributed to market anxiety. This new agreement represents Argentina’s 23rd program with the IMF but is smaller than previous arrangements.

Argentina remains the IMF’s largest borrower and continues repaying a $44 billion agreement from 2022. A prior program in 2018 under former president Mauricio Macri initially totaled $57 billion.

Argentina Secures $20 Billion IMF Deal Amid Economic Stabilization Efforts. (Photo Internet reproduction)

Approximately $8 billion will strengthen central bank reserves while $12 billion will service existing IMF debt. The arrangement includes a ten-year repayment timeline with a grace period of four and a half years.

Argentina’s Path to Economic Recovery

Caputo emphasized that Argentina simultaneously negotiates with the Inter-American Development Bank, Development Bank of Latin America, and World Bank for additional funding. These combined resources could potentially boost Argentina’s gross reserves from the current $26.2 billion to approximately $50 billion.

The package aims to solidify Argentina’s economic recovery. BBVA Research forecasts 5.5% GDP growth for Argentina in 2025, while the latest Market Expectations Survey projects inflation to fall to 23.3% from last year’s 117.8%.

Morgan Stanley expects Argentina to receive approximately $5 billion in initial disbursements this year. This could help replenish dwindling foreign reserves and potentially enable lifting currency controls that have been in place since 2019.

The IMF board’s final approval could take several weeks, with Argentina hoping to secure formal agreement before the IMF’s spring meetings scheduled for April 21-22 in Washington.

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