
Argentina authorises US$5bn in multilateral-backed loans under New York law
A presidential decree opens the way for syndicated bank lending guaranteed by the World Bank and IDB, as Buenos Aires moves to cover a US$4.2bn bond payment due in July without tapping reserves.
Argentina’s government published Decree 478/2026 on Monday, formally authorising the Treasury to borrow up to US$5 billion from international financial institutions. The move coincided with a further compression of the country’s sovereign risk premium, which fell to around 420 basis points — its lowest level since 2018 — signalling that markets are pricing a reduced probability of near-term payment disruption.
The operation is structured not as a conventional bond placement but as a syndicated loan facility, partially guaranteed by multilateral lenders. The World Bank has already approved a US$2 billion guarantee envelope, while the Inter-American Development Bank authorised a separate US$550 million backstop designed to mobilise up to US$1.2 billion in private financing. A further guarantee from the Development Bank of Latin America (CAF) is expected after its board meets on 22 July. The decree permits contracts to be written under the jurisdiction of New York state and federal courts, a standard requirement in cross-border sovereign lending. It waives jurisdictional immunity but explicitly preserves immunity from execution on a defined list of assets, including central bank reserves, public-domain property, essential public services, diplomatic and military assets, and tax receivables.
Viewed from Buenos Aires, the decree is the legal instrument enabling Economy Minister Luis Caputo’s strategy to meet a US$4.2 billion bond maturity on 9 July without drawing on scarce central bank reserves. The Treasury currently holds about US$3.68 billion in its account at the BCRA and has been raising additional dollars through local-law instruments. Caputo has said he negotiated with at least four major Wall Street banks; the multilateral guarantees are intended to bring the all-in cost well below what Argentina would pay in an unenhanced sovereign bond issue. Analysts in New York note that the six-year tenor and three-year grace period attached to the World Bank-backed portion improve the near-term debt-service profile.
The decree tasks the Finance and Treasury secretariats with selecting banks, setting maturities and rates, and paying market commissions. It enters into force immediately. The next concrete milestone is the signing of the loan agreements themselves, which will determine the final pricing and syndicate composition. A larger test looms in 2027, when J.P. Morgan estimates Argentina will need US$9 billion in foreign-currency funding, making the current pre-financing effort a preparatory step toward regaining regular market access.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 1 languages
Argentina surrenders its legal sovereignty to New York courts in order to secure a loan of up to 5 billion dollars. The decision deepens financial dependency, mortgages the country's future, and opens the door to future litigation and external conditionality.
Argentina authorizes up to 5 billion dollars in dollar-denominated borrowing under New York jurisdiction, a pragmatic step to lower financing costs and meet debt maturities. The move signals a return to market discipline and bolsters investor confidence.
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