ARGENTINA · ECONOMY
Key Facts
—The milestone: Argentina’s central bank bought more than $10bn in dollars in 2026, hitting its full-year purchase floor in about five months.
—The reserves: gross reserves stood near $48.4bn, the highest in almost seven years.
—The catch: only about 7 of every 10 dollars bought were retained, and a separate net-reserve target of $8bn for December is still unmet.
—The drain: Argentines pulled about $39bn out of the country since 2024, including $9bn in the first four months of 2026.
—The warning: analysts flag heavy foreign-currency debt maturities in 2027 as the next stress point.
President Javier Milei’s government has notched a genuine win — buying dollars at the fastest pace in a generation — but the headline figure hides a more complicated picture of how many of those dollars Argentina is actually keeping.
RTAsk Rio TimesAsk about Latin American markets, currencies, and companies — answered from our reporting and live data.Start asking →
What the central bank actually achieved
Argentina’s central bank, the BCRA, has bought more than $10bn in the foreign-exchange market so far in 2026, crossing the floor of its full-year accumulation target in roughly five months. Net purchases reached about $10.15bn by early June, according to figures cited by Buenos Aires financial daily Ámbito and the newspaper La Nación.
Gross reserves ended recent sessions near $48.4bn — the highest level in almost seven years and above the peak reached in February under the current administration. May alone added some $2.6bn in purchases, the strongest month of the year.
For a country that for decades has lurched between currency crises, the achievement is real. It marks a sharp turn from 2025, when the economic team missed its reserve goal.
The accumulation is now a central pillar of Milei’s program, giving the bank more room to intervene in the currency market without destabilizing the official exchange rate, which the market expects to hold near 1,400 pesos per dollar in the near term.
The distinction the headlines miss
Here the picture needs correcting. Hitting the dollar-purchase target is not the same as hitting the reserve-accumulation target, and the two are easy to conflate.
The agreement with the International Monetary Fund distinguishes between gross purchases and net reserves that actually count toward the annual goal — and that net target was set, after a downward revision, at $8bn for December. Only about seven of every ten dollars bought this year were retained in gross reserves, which one bank economist called a decade-high retention rate but still short of the net objective.
Much of the gap reflects the Treasury using dollars to pay foreign-currency debt maturities. Consultancy Analytica noted that early in the program, the central bank’s purchases did not translate into effective accumulation because the Treasury drew on them for debt service; that shifted from late February, when new bonds let the government cover maturities without leaning as heavily on the bank’s holdings, accelerating the build-up.
The inflow has been broad-based. Companies and provincial governments have returned to international debt markets at the fastest pace in nearly a decade, with corporate and provincial issuance abroad reaching about $11.9bn since the country’s midterm elections, according to a GMA Capital report.
A strong farm-export season has added dollars, and the economy ministry says a significant share of agricultural foreign-exchange earnings has yet to arrive, which could lift availability further in the short term. Reserve management has also been shaped by valuation swings: a roughly 1% fall in gold recently trimmed about $85m from the bank’s holdings on paper, a reminder that headline reserve figures move with asset prices as well as purchases.
The dollars leaving the country
Against the inflows runs a powerful outflow. Argentines have long sought refuge in the dollar, and data from the BCRA processed by Profit Consultores, cited by La Nación, put household and corporate dollar buying — the category economists call external asset formation — at about $39bn between early 2024 and mid-2026, the single largest drain on the currency balance under Milei.
That includes some $9bn in the first four months of this year alone. Morgan Stanley has projected that savers will keep buying dollars heavily, estimating the bank could accumulate only half its $10bn goal in net terms and making bilateral loans important to bridge the gap.
Analysts point to 2027 as the real test, when a wave of foreign-currency debt maturities falls due and some of this year’s corporate and provincial bond issuance begins to come back. The structural drains — the inflation trajectory and a tourism deficit that no single trading session can fix — remain.
As one market operator put it, even seasonal dollar demand could climb with winter holidays and the World Cup. The accumulation streak is a credibility win for Milei, but the durability of the reserve build, not the speed of the purchases, is what will decide whether Argentina can return to global debt markets.
Frequently Asked Questions
What target did Argentina’s central bank hit?
It reached the floor of its annual dollar-purchase goal — $10bn agreed with the IMF — in about five months, buying more than $10bn in the foreign-exchange market in 2026.
Why is the achievement not as complete as it sounds?
Buying dollars is not the same as keeping them. Only about 70% were retained, and a separate net-reserve target of $8bn for December remains unmet.
How much money is leaving Argentina?
Households and firms bought roughly $39bn in dollars between early 2024 and mid-2026, including about $9bn in the first four months of 2026, the biggest pressure on the currency balance.
What is the main risk ahead?
Analysts point to heavy foreign-currency debt maturities in 2027, alongside persistent inflation and a tourism deficit, as the next sources of pressure on reserves.
View original source — Rio Times ↗


