President Milei signed an executive decree, as expected, yesterday to expedite a financing programme agreement with the IMF. The decree has now been published in the official gazette confirming that the government has agreed to borrow money under a 10-year extended fund facility whose proceeds will be used to repay the IMF and pay USD government debt held by the central bank. The decree requires approval from just one of the legislative chambers to move forward.
In a recent interview, Economy Minister Luis Caputo said that an agreement had already been reached on a loan amount and programme details, but that the new agreement still had to be approved by the IMF executive board. He also said that a programme would be finalised by the end of April.
Meanwhile, yesterday’s BCRA survey revealed that analysts expect inflation to end this year at 23.3% y/y, broadly unchanged from last month’s survey. Monthly inflation is seen dropping to 1.5% m/m by August, from 2.2% in January. GDP is expected to rebound by 4.8% this year, up from 4.6% last month, while the benchmark interest rate is still seen falling to around 24% by year-end, from 29% currently.
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The Aussie 10-yr futures contract continues to trade below the Dec 11 high of 95.851. A stronger bearish theme would expose 95.275, the Nov 14 low and a key support. Clearance of this level would strengthen a bearish theme. For bulls, a confirmed reversal and a breach of 95.851, the Dec 11 high, would instead reinstate a bull cycle and refocus attention on resistance at 96.207, a Fibonacci retracement point.
Gov Kugler (permanent voter, leans dovish) said Friday that rates were likely to be held for "some time" - making her the latest FOMC participant to express little impetus for a cut in the near-term.
The Federal Reserve posted positive net earnings in the week to Feb 5, the first time it has done so since September 2022. The $0.4B uptick compares with an average of negative $1.3B over the preceding 6 months.
