Argentina Boosts World’s Highest Rates Amid Turkey Contagion

  • Pledges to hold them at that level until at least October
  • Central bank offers $500 million in extraordinary auction
We Should Be Worried About EM at Large, not Just Turkey, Says CCLA's Bevan
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Argentina took emergency steps to stabilize its currency in the wake of an emerging-market rout caused by Turkey’s crisis, jacking up its already highest-in-the-world interest rate by 5 percentage points and announcing it will sell $500 million to support the peso.

Policy makers set the rate for seven-day notes at a record 45 percent and pledged to keep it at that level at least until October. The central bank also said it plans to phase out 1 trillion pesos ($33.2 billion) of short-term notes by December in an effort to limit the currency volatility that often popped up when the securities were rolled over. And the bank also changed a system for dollar auctions to make them harder for traders to anticipate.