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Argentina Passes Capital Markets Reform Bill

10 May 2018

A newly-passed capital markets reform bill in Argentina will loosen restrictions on some funds investing in the country. The upgrade would open the country to a wider range of more risk-averse investment funds. The bill allows closed-end mutual funds to invest in alternative assets like real estate or farmland, while requiring them to raise funds through a public offering to boost transparency, according to Reuters.

(Reuters)  Argentina’s Congress passed the government’s capital markets reform bill on Wednesday, seeking to boost a troubled economy by reducing the power of market regulators and loosening restrictions on some funds investing in Argentina.

Investors and economists consider the reform bill key to President Mauricio Macri’s effort to boost investment in the country, whose capital markets are far smaller than regional peers.

The bill sailed through the lower house on Wednesday after already passing the Senate. It should help Argentina join the Morgan Stanley Capital International Emerging Markets Index, an upgrade from its current classification as a frontier market.

Argentina’s benchmark Merval stock index was up nearly 6 percent on Wednesday afternoon.

The upgrade would open the country to a wider range of more risk-averse investment funds. The bill allows closed-end mutual funds to invest in alternative assets like real estate or farmland, while requiring them to raise funds through a public offering to boost transparency, according to a summary sent by a Macri-aligned lawmaker.

World Bank data show that in 2016, the market capitalization of listed domestic companies was 11.7 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) in Argentina, far below the 86 percent in Chile, 42 percent in Brazil and Peru, 37 percent in Colombia and 34 percent in Mexico.

A spokesman for Argentina’s BYMA stock exchange said the market capitalization of listed companies was equivalent to 17 percent of GDP in April.

The overwhelming 159 to 69 vote came a day after Macri announced his government will negotiate a financing deal with the International Monetary Fund aimed at stabilizing Argentina’s volatile peso currency while curbing one of the world’s highest inflation rates.

The law will modify a rule approved by the previous government that allowed market regulators to remove board members of private companies. The law also expands the regulatory body’s power to supervise external audits of companies that raise funds publicly.

It also seeks to boost domestic savings and investment by creating mortgage securities linked to inflation to allow banks to issue more mortgage loans, and creates new instruments for small and mid-sized businesses to raise funds.

Since taking office in December 2015, Macri has implemented a series of pro-market reforms. His government believes changes in labor law are still needed to make the country competitive.

It remains unclear what conditions the IMF will impose in exchange for its financing help.