(ARGENT; Caa1/CCC/CCC+)
Recall Mexico early 1995 a somewhat similar situation when the government had recently attempted meaningful reforms then stumbled, which involved an FX devaluation, and had significant outflows of capital.
The Treasury ultimately made USD20bn available from the ESF, of which USD11.5bn was drawn down, according to the Petersen Institute. Short term swaps with maturities of up to 90 days in an amount of up to USD9bn were used as well as medium-term loans of up to 5 years and securities guarantees of up to 10 years.
It will be interesting to see if today's official announcement contains a similar blueprint of support. Please see the link to the article for more info on the Mex rescue package in 1995:
https://www.piie.com/publications/chapters_preview/43/6iie2717.pdf
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As with Deutsche earlier, NatWest has changed its Fed call after the Powell Jackson Hole speech to reflect a 25bp September cut. Previously, the call was for no cuts in 2025. The new baseline outlook includes further 25bp cuts in December and March, bringing rates closer to neutral ("however, the changing composition of the committee becomes far less clear once Powell term expires in May").
Gains this week in USDCAD and the breach of resistance at 1.3879, the Aug 1 high, marked a positive development, however the slippage into the Friday close undermines this sentiment - for now. Moving average studies have crossed and are in a bull-mode position, reinforcing current conditions. An extension higher would signal scope for a climb towards 1.4019, a Fibonacci retracement. On the downside, support to watch lies at 1.3769, the 50-day EMA - a level not yet challenged by the correction lower.
The June retail sales release helps wrap up the last major data before Canadian Q2 GDP is released on Friday August 29.
