Argentine black market peso hits record low as gap to official FX tops 50%

Reuters

Published Jan 17, 2024 11:52AM ET

Updated Jan 17, 2024 12:46PM ET

By Jorge Otaola

BUENOS AIRES (Reuters) -Argentina's black market peso exchange rate weakened a sharp 5.6% on Wednesday to a record low of 1,250 per dollar, with its gap to the official rate widening above 50%, underscoring renewed pressure on the embattled currency.

The South American country is battling inflation over 200%, which saps savings and makes peso assets less attractive. The official peso exchange rate near 819 pesos per dollar, devalued sharply last month, is propped up by strict capital controls.

Analysts said that a crawling peg that sees the peso weakened officially some 2% each month was not enough to keep up with the high inflation, causing the exchange rate gap to widen, even if remains far narrower than before December's devaluation.

A move to allow importers to settle newly-issued Bopreal bonds via parallel currency markets to access foreign currency also put pressure on the peso, traders said.