Key Facts
Country risk hits an eight-year low, falling 6 basis points (-1.4%) to 415bps on July 3, the lowest reading since April 2018.
The peso holds firm near its 52-week ceiling, with USD/ARS at 1488, down 0.05% on the day and just 0.2% shy of the 52-week high of 1492.
YPF leads turnover on the local board, rising 2.1% on roughly $3m traded, the single most-active name in the scan.
Banco Macro and the exchange operator BYMA outperform, both up more than 2%, as compressing funding costs lift banks and market infrastructure names.
The Merval’s dollar return stays subdued for the first half, up just 0.8% since January even as sovereign bonds and country risk compressed sharply.
Today’s Focus
Argentina’s local market spent July 3 doing the quiet, unglamorous work of consolidation — the Merval nudged higher, the peso barely moved, and the real story sat in the credit market, where country risk fell to its lowest level in eight years.
Energy names dominate the tape by weight, and YPF’s 2.1% gain on the day’s heaviest turnover kept the flagship stock in front, even as the sector as a whole is still digesting a sharp pullback from its June highs.
Banks were the standout performers — Banco Macro and Grupo Financiero Galicia both firmed, riding the same wave of falling risk premia and ratings upgrades that has taken sovereign spreads to levels last seen before Argentina’s 2018 currency crisis.
None of this is loud. It is the sound of a market re-rating slowly, dollar by dollar, basis point by basis point, while investors wait to see whether the reform trade can finally translate into an equity re-rating to match the bond rally.
What matters today. Country risk’s slide to 415bps — its lowest since April 2018 — is doing more to reprice Argentina than the Merval itself, which remains roughly flat in dollar terms for the year.
01 The session in one read
Buenos Aires closed July 3 in a holding pattern — a modest index gain, a peso that barely twitched, and a credit market doing the heavy lifting. Turnover was thin by historical standards, consistent with the pre-holiday lull that also gripped Wall Street ahead of the July 4 break.
The standout was not the equity tape itself but the backdrop: the riesgo país cedió 6 unidades (-1,4%) a 415 puntos básicos, el menor nivel desde fines de abril de 2018. That is Argentina’s country-risk gauge, JPMorgan’s EMBI spread, at its lowest since before the 2018 currency crisis.
Locally listed stocks reflected that improving credit backdrop more than any single domestic catalyst — banks and the exchange operator outperformed, while the energy complex, still nursing a correction from its June peak, lagged behind the broader tape.
Assessment — Bonds are believers; equities still hesitate MEDIUM
The evidence is lopsided: sovereign credit has re-rated hard on two ratings upgrades and a compressing EMBI spread, yet the Merval’s dollar return for the first half sits at just 0.8% and YPF — worth nearly a third of the index — remains well below its recent peak. That gap between the bond rally and the equity market’s caution is the real signal here, and it likely persists until either oil prices firm or the government’s RIGI pipeline starts converting announced projects into visible cash flow. Watch country risk’s approach to the 400-point threshold — a break below it would mark psychological confirmation that Argentina is closing in on single-digit external financing, and historically that has been the trigger for equity flows to catch up with the bond move.
02 The day’s numbers
Measure
Level
Change
Read
S&P Merval (ARS/USD)
—
+1.13% (ARS) / +0.49% (USD)
Second daily gain, tracking the drop in country risk
USD/ARS (peso)
1488
-0.05%
Firm, just 0.2% off its 52-week high of 1492
Country risk (EMBI)
415bps
-1.4% (-6bps)
Lowest since April 2018; single-digit financing in sight
Argentina equities (ARGT proxy)
91.45
+0.37%
Still 10.8% below its 52-week high of 102.57
S&P 500 (risk backdrop)
7483
+0.00%
Flat into the July 4 holiday, sets the global risk tone
The peso’s stability is the quiet headline: USD/ARS at 1488 sits within a whisker of its 52-week ceiling of 1492, a range that has held since the pair’s 52-week low of 1256. For foreign desks, that narrow band signals a central bank comfortable defending the current level rather than one under pressure.
The Argentina-equities proxy tracked on US exchanges, ARGT, is a useful cross-check for offshore investors without direct BYMA access — it firmed 0.37% but remains more than 10% below its 52-week high, underscoring how much further local shares still trail the credit rally.
Country risk’s break of 415bps is the number the desk cares about most. It is not simply a bond metric — it feeds directly into the cost of capital for every YPF project, every provincial bond and every corporate issuer on the board.
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
Jul 6, 2026 · 03:24
S&P MERVAL · benchmark
3,196,900
+1.26%
+53.83% over 12 months
Market breadth · 14 names
93% advancing
13 ▲ advancing1 declining ▼
Currencies, rates & key inputs
USD / ARS
1,488
-0.02%
Brent crude
72.35
+0.77%
Soybeans
1,172
+3.56%
Sector heatmap · average move today
Technology
+3.57%
GLOBANT
Energy
+2.33%
YPF, TGS
Consumer Disc.
+2.02%
MIRGOR, MERCADOLIBRE
Financials
+1.46%
GGAL, COME, BYMA
Utilities
+0.79%
PAMPA, CEPU
Telecom
+0.50%
TELECOM ARG
Mining
+0.23%
TXAR
Materials
-0.07%
ALUAR, LOMA NEGRA
Latin America scoreboard
IndexLastTodayStrength
IbovespaBrazil
174,070
+0.74%
S&P/BMV IPCMexico
67,060
-0.02%
S&P IPSAChile
10,821
+0.55%
S&P MERVALArgentina
3,196,900
+1.26%
MSCI COLCAPColombia
2,295.72
+1.57%
BVL S&P PerúPeru
55,809.71
+0.30%
Full instrument board
InstrumentLastChangeYoYPrev.HighLowVolume
MERVAL
3,196,900
+1.26%
+53.83%
3,157,091
—
—
—
USD/ARS
1,488
-0.02%
+20.86%
1,488
1,488
1,488
—
YPF
71,575
+2.14%
+79.05%
70,075
71,675
70,100
62,840
GGAL
7,975
+0.82%
+27.40%
7,910
7,995
7,890
238,394
PAMPA
5,135
+0.88%
+42.08%
5,090
5,200
5,055
304,925
TXAR
665.00
+0.23%
+2.94%
663.50
671.00
654.50
1,238,834
ALUAR
993.00
+0.20%
+36.98%
991.00
998.50
980.00
216,615
TGS
9,195
+2.51%
+38.14%
8,970
9,225
8,970
43,815
CEPU
2,323
+0.69%
+59.86%
2,307
2,338
2,219
206,244
MIRGOR
17,300
+2.82%
-16.95%
16,825
17,400
16,725
1,569
COME
42.28
+1.25%
-22.06%
41.76
43.90
41.72
3,097,746
LOMA NEGRA
3,673
-0.34%
+30.97%
3,685
3,750
3,615
153,088
BYMA
309.25
+2.32%
+56.26%
302.25
310.00
303.00
1,699,994
TELECOM ARG
3,990
+0.50%
+80.54%
3,970
4,098
3,950
15,369
GLOBANT
32.51
+3.57%
-64.56%
31.39
33.19
31.79
2,140,955
MERCADOLIBRE
1,763
+1.22%
-29.86%
1,742
1,782
1,749
407,805
Largest moves today
GLOBANT
32.51
+3.57%
MIRGOR
17,300
+2.82%
TGS
9,195
+2.51%
BYMA
309.25
+2.32%
YPF
71,575
+2.14%
MERVAL
3,196,900
+1.26%
COME
42.28
+1.25%
MERCADOLIBRE
1,763
+1.22%
The session read
The S&P MERVAL rose 1.26%, with breadth positive — 13 of 14 names higher. Technology led, while Materials lagged.
03 Why it moved — falling country risk and a benign US jobs read
The proximate trigger was offshore: a softer-than-expected US payrolls report cooled fears of further Federal Reserve tightening, and that relief rippled into emerging-market credit broadly, Argentina included. Local sovereign bonds caught the bid and dragged country risk to its cycle low.
Underneath that global tailwind sits a genuinely local story. Fitch Ratings elevó la nota de Argentina de CCC+ a B-, y un mes más tarde S&P Global Ratings hizo lo propio — two of the three major agencies now agree on the B- tier, a technical threshold that widened the pool of institutional funds permitted to hold Argentine debt.
The reform trade has kept delivering on the ground, too: el BCRA superó con holgura su objetivo de compras de USD 10.000 millones en el mercado de cambios; las provincias y el sector corporativo colocaron deuda en el mercado internacional por casi USD 6.900 millones; el Gobierno prorrogó el RIGI hasta julio de 2027, incluyó iniciativas del upstream y llegó a 20 proyectos aprobados por más de USD 45.000 millones. RIGI is Milei’s flagship investment-incentive regime, and its extension plus a swelling project pipeline is precisely the kind of policy continuity foreign capital has been waiting for.
Yet the equity market has not fully followed the credit market’s lead — a reminder that lower financing costs and higher share prices do not always arrive on the same calendar.
04 The day’s movers
Driver
Level / Move
Change
Note
YPF (YPFD)
$3m turnover
+2.1%
Heaviest-traded name; nearly a third of the index by weight
Banco Macro (BMA)
Among top domestic gainers
+2.1%
Bank leverage to falling country risk and cheaper credit
BYMA (exchange operator)
Among top domestic gainers
+2.3%
Biggest single gainer; benefits from rising turnover
Grupo Financiero Galicia (GGAL)
$1m turnover
+0.8%
Second most-active banking name on the board
Vista Energy (VIST)
$1m turnover
+1.7%
Shale-oil pure play tracking Vaca Muerta sentiment
Pampa Energía (PAMP)
$1m turnover
+0.9%
Diversified energy name, more defensive than pure-play peers
Loma Negra (LOMA)
—
−0.3%
Cement maker among the session’s few domestic laggards
Cross-listed CEDEAR trackers (SPY, QQQ, MSFT, NVDA, IBIT, GLD, AAPL, MELI)
$1m–2m turnover each
+0.9% to +2.5% / −0.4%
Argentine-listed proxies for US tape and gold/bitcoin, not domestic earnings
Strip out the cross-listed instruments and the domestic story is one of banks and infrastructure outpacing energy — Banco Macro and BYMA both cleared 2%, while YPF’s 2.1% gain came on the heaviest turnover of the session, a sign that flows are still concentrating in the index’s largest weight.
The CEDEAR trackers — Buenos Aires-listed certificates for US names and ETFs like SPY, QQQ, GLD and IBIT — moved broadly in line with Wall Street and the peso rather than any Argentine catalyst; foreign desks should read those moves as currency and global-tape proxies, not domestic sentiment.
Vista Energy’s 1.7% gain, alongside Pampa’s more modest 0.9%, shows the energy complex participating but without the conviction seen in banks — consistent with the sector’s broader underperformance since its June peak.
05 The regional scoreboard
Index
Country
Change
S&P Merval
Argentina
+1.13% (ARS) / +0.49% (USD)
S&P/BMV IPC
Mexico
−0.02%
Ibovespa
Brazil
—
S&P/CLX IPSA
Chile
—
COLCAP
Colombia
—
Only Argentina and Mexico are independently verified for July 3: Mexico’s main stock market index, the IPC, fell to 67060 points on July 3, 2026, losing 0.02% from the previous session, a session Reuters wires linked to a holiday-thinned tape and lingering trade-policy jitters.
The Merval’s modest peso gain outpaced a essentially flat Mexican benchmark, though both markets shared the same quiet, low-conviction tone typical of a US holiday week.
The live market board above carries the closes for Brazil’s Ibovespa, Chile’s IPSA and Colombia’s COLCAP, which are not independently confirmed here and are marked accordingly.
06 The technical picture
In dollar terms the Merval spent the first half of the year testing the USD 2,000–2,200 band — tras superar los USD 2.200 en junio, perdió impulso y volvió a la zona de 2.000 dólares — and July 3’s gain did little to shift that range. That zone is now the level to watch for any decisive breakout.
The energy sector’s pullback has been the main drag on the index technically: el sector energético tiene la mayor ponderación, con casi 40% de las tenencias, y YPF es la empresa de mayor peso, con casi un tercio del índice, and YPF cayó 21,2% en dólares desde su máximo reciente, pese a los anuncios vinculados al proyecto Argentina LNG y al lanzamiento de LLL Oil, mientras Pampa Energía retrocedió 8,9% desde su pico. That correction is now large enough that some local strategists see it as a buying window rather than a warning sign.
On the currency side, USD/ARS’s 52-week range of 1256 to 1492 leaves the pair just 0.2% from its ceiling — a level that, if breached, would be the first genuinely new technical signal for the peso in months. Country risk’s approach to 400bps is the other line in the sand; a clean break below it would be the clearest technical confirmation yet that Argentina’s credit re-rating has further to run.
07 What to watch
Country risk at 400bps: Whether the EMBI spread breaks the psychological 400-point floor, which would open the door to single-digit external financing costs
RIGI project pipeline: Progress converting the 20 approved projects worth over $45bn into visible capex and cash flow, the real test of the reform trade
Oil prices: Brent and WTI levels given YPF and Pampa’s outsized index weight and their recent pullback from June highs
US rates and jobs data: This week’s US trade balance and inflation-expectations prints, which will shape carry-trade appetite for Argentine and broader EM assets
Background: Argentina’s Merval Extends Its Bounce a Second Day as YPF and the Energy Trade Lead.
Background: Argentine Stocks Bounce Back as Reform Trade Holds Firm.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why did Argentina’s country risk fall to an eight-year low?
A softer US jobs report cooled Federal Reserve rate-hike fears while local ratings upgrades from Fitch and S&P to B- widened the pool of funds able to hold Argentine debt, pushing the EMBI spread to 415bps, its lowest since April 2018.
Is the Merval’s gain on July 3 driven by domestic or global factors?
Both — global risk appetite improved on the US jobs data, but local banks and the exchange operator BYMA outperformed specifically on the falling cost of Argentine credit.
Why is YPF’s move important for the whole index?
YPF is the single largest weight in the Merval, controlling nearly a third of the index, so its 2.1% gain on the heaviest turnover of the session carried outsized influence on the overall close.
Are CEDEARs like AAPL or MELI part of Argentina’s domestic market move?
No — CEDEARs are Buenos Aires-listed certificates tracking foreign stocks and ETFs; their moves reflect the US market and the peso, not Argentine corporate performance.
Reported by Diego Fernández for The Rio Times — Latin American financial news. Filed Monday, July 6, 2026, covering the July 3 session.
Index, currency and single-stock levels are session readings via the Rio Times market data feed (B3 and regional exchanges); technical readings are from the daily chart. Figures are point-in-time and not investment advice.
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