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Milei’s market honeymoon ends as investors question economic plan

Argentina’s libertarian president Javier Milei is facing the first major test of his plan to fix the country’s troubled economy, after his moves to control a run on the peso sparked a market backlash.

The government sets the peso’s official exchange rate at about 960 to the dollar, but on parallel exchange markets — both legal and illegal — the Argentine currency hit a record low of almost 1,500 per greenback this month.

The gap between the rates is seen as a key indicator of confidence in the government, and can fuel inflation.

Last Saturday Milei unveiled a plan to stabilise the peso: the central bank will tighten rules on money printing to shrink Argentina’s money supply, and start using its scarce foreign currency reserves to buy pesos on the parallel market.

“If I turn off all the money printing taps, the problem ends,” Milei told broadcaster LN+. “There’s no…

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