Key Facts
The Merval slipped just 0.46% to 3,096,068 on June 25 — a fifth down day, but by far the mildest.
The MSCI selloff is exhausting — the index is searching for a floor after this week’s crash.
The damage stayed in equities — bonds held firm and the country-risk gauge barely moved.
The peso held steady near 1,477 per dollar — confirming this was a stock-specific repricing.
The reform trade shifts to fundamentals — from an index-upgrade bet to activity, credit and earnings.
Today’s Focus
The bleeding nearly stopped. Argentina’s Merval slipped only 0.46% to 3,096,068 on June 25 — still a fifth straight down day, but a fraction of the more than 4% crash that followed this week’s MSCI disappointment. After the index company kept Argentina in its lowest tier and dashed the upgrade hope, the market is now searching for a floor.
The most reassuring signal sits beneath the surface. The damage has stayed almost entirely in the stock market: government bonds held firm and the country-risk gauge barely moved, sitting near its lowest in years. That tells you investors are repricing one specific bet — the hope of a near-automatic flood of foreign index money — rather than fleeing the country.
With that bet off the table for now, the story shifts. The reform trade must lean on Argentina’s own fundamentals: economic activity, the expansion of credit, and companies turning stability into earnings.
What matters today. The shrinking daily losses, the steady peso and the firm bonds together point to a selloff exhausting itself — but the next leg now depends on visible economic acceleration, not an index upgrade.
01 The session in one read
The Merval closed at 3,096,068, down just 0.46% and about 14,000 points, after trading between roughly 3,073,753 and 3,138,305; it was the fifth straight fall, but a small fraction of the more than 4% plunge that defined the prior session. The shrinking size of the daily loss is the story: after a brutal three-day reaction to the MSCI verdict, the selling has slowed to a crawl, the natural behaviour of a market searching for a bottom.
The deeper picture confirmed the calm. While the index drifted lower, the peso held steady near 1,477 per dollar, sovereign bonds stayed firm, and the country-risk gauge barely budged from its multi-year lows. That combination — soft equities, solid everything else — is the signature of a contained, stock-specific repricing rather than a broad loss of confidence in Argentina.
Assessment — The selloff exhausts HIGH
The dominant feature was the sharp deceleration of the MSCI-driven selloff, with the loss shrinking to a fraction of the prior day’s. Firm bonds, a steady peso and a stable country-risk gauge mark the damage as contained. The variable to watch is the country-risk gauge.
02 The day’s numbers
Measure
Level
Change
Read
Merval close
3,096,068
−0.46%
A fifth dip, but a fraction of the prior plunge.
Session range
3,073,753–3,138,305
—
A narrow band — the steep selling has faded.
Currency (USD/ARS)
1,477
+0.15%
Steady-to-firm — a stock-specific move, not currency.
Momentum (daily)
~47
—
Reset through the midline from the run-up peak.
Three-day-plus loss
~11%
−
The upgrade-driven run has been erased.
Read together, the table marks a market stabilising. The loss is tiny next to the prior sessions, the range is narrow, and the peso firmed slightly — the dollar quote fell, which is peso strength. After the MSCI shock, this is what the search for a floor looks like.
Live Market IntelligenceArgentina — Live Market BoardInside: market breadth, the sector heatmap, currencies & rates, the Latin America scoreboard and the full instrument board.
Rio Times · Live Market Intelligence
Argentina — Live Market Board
BYMA · Buenos Aires
Jun 26, 2026 · 03:51
S&P MERVAL · benchmark
3,096,068
-0.46%
+52.94% over 12 months
Market breadth · 14 names
14% advancing
2 ▲ advancing12 declining ▼
Currencies, rates & key inputs
USD / ARS
1,477
-0.15%
Brent crude
74.20
-1.41%
Soybeans
1,152
+2.20%
Sector heatmap · average move today
Mining
+1.28%
TXAR
Utilities
+0.04%
PAMPA, CEPU
Telecom
-0.06%
TELECOM ARG
Energy
-0.09%
YPF, TGS
Consumer Disc.
-1.30%
MIRGOR, MERCADOLIBRE
Financials
-1.75%
GGAL, COME, BYMA
Materials
-2.05%
ALUAR, LOMA NEGRA
Technology
-4.77%
GLOBANT
Latin America scoreboard
IndexLastTodayStrength
IbovespaBrazil
171,990
+0.87%
S&P/BMV IPCMexico
67,416
+1.72%
S&P IPSAChile
10,706
+0.29%
S&P MERVALArgentina
3,096,068
-0.46%
MSCI COLCAPColombia
2,261.53
-0.42%
BVL S&P PerúPeru
54,833.60
-1.48%
Full instrument board
InstrumentLastChangeYoYPrev.HighLowVolume
MERVAL
3,096,068
-0.46%
+52.94%
3,110,490
—
—
—
USD/ARS
1,477
-0.15%
+24.12%
1,479
1,477
1,477
—
YPF
70,750
-0.07%
+77.88%
70,800
71,950
69,600
234,345
GGAL
7,605
-0.26%
+22.27%
7,625
7,760
7,550
914,145
PAMPA
4,933
-0.70%
+48.06%
4,968
5,100
4,900
1,182,913
TXAR
675.00
+1.28%
+9.35%
666.50
677.50
663.50
844,277
ALUAR
990.00
-3.60%
+50.91%
1,027
1,045
984.50
697,540
TGS
9,120
-0.11%
+49.02%
9,130
9,270
9,000
134,932
CEPU
2,223
+0.77%
+60.51%
2,206
2,235
2,155
684,334
MIRGOR
16,050
-0.16%
-25.95%
16,075
16,225
15,800
1,086
COME
41.02
-2.38%
-25.61%
42.02
43.30
40.50
11,067,802
LOMA NEGRA
3,560
-0.49%
+32.62%
3,578
3,585
3,480
141,511
BYMA
300.00
-2.60%
+50.63%
308.00
313.00
299.50
1,842,566
TELECOM ARG
3,950
-0.06%
+85.88%
3,953
4,018
3,905
456,209
GLOBANT
27.73
-4.77%
-69.70%
29.12
29.29
27.56
2,258,141
MERCADOLIBRE
1,619
-2.43%
-36.75%
1,660
1,663
1,614
439,474
Largest moves today
GLOBANT
27.73
-4.77%
ALUAR
990.00
-3.60%
BYMA
300.00
-2.60%
MERCADOLIBRE
1,619
-2.43%
COME
41.02
-2.38%
TXAR
675.00
+1.28%
CEPU
2,223
+0.77%
PAMPA
4,933
-0.70%
The session read
The S&P MERVAL eased 0.46%, with breadth negative — 2 of 14 names higher. Mining led, while Technology lagged.
03 Why it moved — the shock fades, fundamentals take over
The single most diagnostic fact is what did not happen. After the MSCI decision to keep Argentina in its lowest tier triggered a bank-led crash earlier in the week, June 25 could have brought more forced selling; instead the index barely moved, and the wider financial picture stayed calm. Government bonds held firm, supported by the central bank’s rebuilding of reserves, decelerating inflation and improving confidence, and the country-risk gauge sat near its lowest in years. That divergence — equities soft while bonds and the currency hold — is the clearest evidence that the selloff was a concentrated repricing of one crowded bet, not a broader retreat from the country.
With the upgrade hope now off the table for the foreseeable future, the market’s focus shifts. Analysts argue the drivers for Argentine shares move from the prospect of near-automatic foreign inflows to the country’s own fundamentals: the pace of economic activity, the expansion of credit from unusually low levels, recovering real wages, and the ability of companies to turn macroeconomic stability into earnings growth. Several brokers still see meaningful upside in the banks and energy names on that basis, but the case now rests on a visible acceleration of the economy rather than a one-off boost from global index funds.
04 The day’s movers
Driver
Level / Move
Change
Note
Merval (Argentina)
3,096,068
−0.46%
A fifth dip, but the selling has nearly stopped.
Peso (USD/ARS)
1,477
+0.15%
Steady-to-firm — the calm beneath the surface.
Sovereign bonds
Firm
+
Held up — the damage stayed in equities.
Country-risk gauge
~439
—
Near multi-year lows — barely moved on the day.
The story within the story is the split between Argentina’s stocks and its bonds. Equities took the MSCI blow because the upgrade bet lived in a handful of shares; the bonds, which answer to the country’s fiscal and reserve picture, never flinched. That divergence is the market’s own verdict that the shock was specific and contained — and the reason the equity selloff is now fading rather than feeding on itself.
05 The regional scoreboard
Index
Country
Change
IPC
Mexico
+1.72%
Ibovespa
Brazil
+0.87%
IPSA
Chile
+0.29%
Colcap
Colombia
−0.42%
Merval
Argentina
−0.46%
The region mostly turned higher, led by Mexico’s jump on a friendlier inflation backdrop, with Brazil and Chile also rising. Argentina and Colombia were the laggards, each easing only slightly as they digested their own stories — Argentina the MSCI aftermath, Colombia its election. But Argentina’s loss was small and shrinking, fitting a session where its own selloff was exhausting just as the broader regional mood improved.
06 The technical picture
Momentum has reset and is steadying. After the climb to a record near 3,390,000 in mid-June left the market stretched on upgrade hopes, the daily gauge fell back through the midline near 47 during the selloff and has now flattened, consistent with a decline that is exhausting rather than accelerating. The shorter-term trend measure remains negative but its downward push is easing.
The levels frame what comes next. The medium-term averages around 3,070,000 to 3,150,000, where the index is now hovering, are the immediate battleground; holding this zone would signal stabilisation. Far below, the rising long-term trend line marks the floor of the multi-year uptrend and remains well under current levels, so the broader advance that has run since 2023 is tested but firmly intact. Measured in dollars, the index sits around a fifth below its early-2025 record, back in a zone where buyers have historically stepped in.
07 What to watch
The country-risk gauge: the cleanest macro tell — as long as it holds near its multi-year lows, the equity selloff stays contained.
Economic activity and credit: the new drivers of the reform trade now that the upgrade catalyst is gone — the signs analysts say will decide the next leg.
The banks and energy names: the upgrade-sensitive shares that led the rout, and where analysts still see fundamental upside.
The next MSCI window: whether Argentina enters a 2027–2028 review path, the official step that would revive the upgrade hope.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why did Argentina’s Merval barely move on June 25, 2026?
The index slipped just 0.46% to about 3,096,068, a fifth straight decline but by far the mildest, as the heavy selling that followed this week’s MSCI disappointment finally began to exhaust. After the index company kept Argentina in its lowest tier and the market crashed more than 4% the day before, June 25 brought only a shallow give-back — the sign of a market searching for a floor rather than still tumbling. The peso held steady, and Argentina’s deeper picture stayed intact: sovereign bonds remained firm and the country-risk gauge barely moved.
Is the post-MSCI selloff over?
It looks close to bottoming. After three steep days that erased roughly 11% from the early-June record, the decline has now slowed to a crawl, the classic pattern of a selloff running out of sellers. Crucially, the damage stayed contained to the stock market: government bonds held firm and the country-risk gauge sat near its lowest levels in years, showing investors are repricing one specific equity bet — the upgrade hope — rather than fleeing Argentina. That containment is the strongest sign the worst of the shock has passed.
What happens to the reform trade now that the upgrade is off the table?
It shifts from a story about index reclassification to one about fundamentals. With the near-automatic foreign inflows of an upgrade no longer in prospect for now, analysts say the drivers become Argentina’s own economy: the pace of activity, the expansion of credit from very low levels, recovering real wages, and companies turning macroeconomic stability into earnings growth. Several brokers still see solid upside in the banks and energy names on those grounds, but the case now rests on visible economic acceleration rather than a one-off boost from global index funds.
Has the Argentine market fallen too far?
After five down days and a roughly 11% slide, it has fallen a long way fast, and momentum has dropped back through the midline from the stretched levels it reached at the early-June peak. Measured in dollars, the index sits around a fifth below its early-2025 record, back in a zone where buyers have historically appeared. None of that guarantees a bottom, but the shrinking size of the daily losses and the steadiness of bonds and the currency suggest the selling pressure is fading rather than building.
What levels should investors watch next?
The medium-term averages around 3,070,000 to 3,150,000, where the index is now hovering, are the immediate battleground; holding this zone would signal the selloff has stabilised. Far below, the rising long-term trend line is the floor that defines the multi-year uptrend, and it remains well under current levels, so the broader trend is intact. The country-risk gauge is the cleaner macro tell: as long as it holds near its multi-year lows, it signals the equity selloff is contained rather than the start of something broader.
Connected Coverage
This report continues The Rio Times’ daily coverage of Argentina’s market: see the prior session, Argentina’s Merval Crashes 4.25% as MSCI Keeps It in the Lowest Tier and Banks Lead the Rout. For the wider regional picture on a day the region turned higher, see the Global Economy Briefing, and for how a friendlier inflation backdrop lifted other markets, our companion Brazil, Mexico and crypto reports. Together they show a region steadying as Argentina’s own shock begins to fade.
Reported by Richard Mann for The Rio Times — Latin American financial news. Filed June 26, 2026, covering the June 25 session. Index, currency and single-stock levels are session-close readings via the Rio Times market data feed (BYMA and regional exchanges); technical readings are from the daily chart. Figures are point-in-time and not investment advice.
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