Argentina’s government took steps to support the peso for the fifth straight session yesterday, as Economy Minister Luis Caputo was in Washington to meet with his US counterpart. From the Bloomberg News Buenos Aires bureau, Patrick Gillespie and Manuela Tobias are here to explain how we got here. Plus: A mall mogul takes another look at politics after the Los Angeles wildfires, and Din Tai Fung hopes to expand its cult following in the US. If this email was forwarded to you, click here to sign up. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent is trying to get Javier Milei out of a bind. The rub is Argentina’s president isn’t exactly in need of money from Washington, but instead lacks political muscle in Buenos Aires and beyond. The Trump administration is negotiating a $20 billion financial lifeline with Argentina to, in Bessent’s words, “bridge” Milei to the nation’s midterm elections on Oct. 26. Such a deal would be a reward for Donald Trump’s top ally in Latin America, for his relentless loyalty and praise for the US president, who will host Milei on Oct. 14 at the White House. How did Milei get in this rut? For more than a year after his election, Argentina’s self-described anarcho-capitalist president kept his approval ratings high as his government went on an unprecedented austerity campaign to fix a chronic fiscal deficit. They slashed spending and cut more than 50,000 governments jobs. To celebrate, he went on stage in February with Elon Musk—who was then working to chop the US federal workforce—and wielded his symbolic chain saw. (Musk says he regrets waving the saw himself.) Musk and Milei at the Conservative Political Action Conference in February. Photographer: Jason C. Andrew/Bloomberg Theatrics aside, Milei, who inherited a full-blown economic crisis in 2023, posted results early on. Inflation, once rising at a rate near 300% annually, is now about 34%. Poverty is also at its lowest level in several years. Milei’s party cruised to victory in June in city hall elections in the nation’s capital, driving hype that he was on course for a big win in October. Then, in August, the plot thickened. Milei’s sister and top adviser, Karina Milei, got embroiled in bribery allegations she has denied. The economy is sputtering again as the president hiked interest rates to keep inflation low at the cost of grinding business to a halt. Milei also ignored would-be political allies in a go-it-alone campaign strategy that oozed overconfidence despite his party’s skeletal structure of staffers to get out the vote. On Sept. 7, Milei’s party was wiped out in the local election for the province of Buenos Aires—separate from the city—by the leftist Peronist rivals that investors fear. Argentina’s bonds and currency started to nosedive as markets sensed that Milei is now in a very tight midterm race and that his path to reelection in 2027 looks more challenging. Perhaps most concerning: Apathy reigned as only 61% of voters showed up in the province, one of the lowest levels of ballots cast in decades. Bessent came to the rescue on Sept. 22. He pledged a whatever-it-takes approach for Argentina because it’s a “systemically important US ally in Latin America.” Two days later, he announced negotiations were underway for the $20 billion lifeline, among a suite of other options. Markets rose for a few days, only to sour again as no real details or timeline emerged about when Milei would get rescued. His team, having already burned through an estimated $1.3 billion in the last week to keep the peso afloat, arrived in Washington over the weekend to continue talks. Bessent has made it clear he’s looking beyond Milei in the region. Several nations—including Brazil, Bolivia, Chile and Colombia—have presidential elections on the horizon. Bessent said on CNBC that he sees Argentina as a free-market “beacon” that, if successful, could be a blueprint to spark a wave of pro-US governments elsewhere in the region that’s governed mostly by the left right now. It’s unclear whether any of this will actually materialize. When Trump met Milei in September on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly, he said, “I don’t think they need a bailout.” Republicans in farm states are angry about the idea of aiding Argentina, whose farmers have stepped in to supply China with soybeans amid trade tensions. Democrats are prodding Trump about how this aligns with the “America First” agenda. The optics also aren’t great for Milei, who hasn’t brought the chain saw back to campaign rallies. He’d be a libertarian receiving a bailout from US taxpayers after repeatedly boasting that “the state isn’t the solution, it’s the problem.” A key actor in all this is the International Monetary Fund, which already gave Milei’s government most of a $20 billion loan in April, bringing Argentina’s total debts to the organization to $55 billion. Bessent and the IMF are coordinating aid for Argentina, and a simpler path could be the US helping Argentina reduce its debt load there. As the IMF knows all too well, throwing money into Argentina doesn’t fix things. Milei’s root problem is his dwindling political support to win votes from Argentines who say the chain saw cut too deep. |