Argentina Exchange Calls for Lifting Capital Controls.
Eliana Raszewski and James Attwood. Bloomberg.
August 28, 2009.

Aug. 28 (Bloomberg) -- Argentina's stock exchange called on the government
to lift capital controls that caused it to become the only major Latin
America market classified as "frontier," adding the move may help lure $10
billion in foreign investment.

Requirements for international investors to deposit 30 percent of what they
put in Argentina with the central bank for a year "have stopped making
sense," Adelmo Gabbi, the Buenos Aires stock exchange's chairman, said
yesterday in a speech.

Capital controls prompted MSCI Inc. to remove Argentina from its benchmark
emerging-market index in June, assigning it the so-called frontier status
along with the world's least developed markets. The controls have helped
Argentina avoid volatility, said President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner.

"We have to seek a rule so that the inflow of funds won't be speculative,"
she said, without elaborating.

New York-based MSCI, which estimates its indexes are tracked by funds with
$3 trillion, classifies its markets based on size, liquidity and economic
development. Argentina's demotion also followed Fernandez's seizure of about
$24 billion in assets held by private pension funds, the country's biggest
stockholders.

"We want to stop being the only country in the region that participates in
the frontier index because we feel that we have more in common with Latin
America than with Nigeria, Ghana and Kenya," Gabbi said.

Merval's Rally

Argentina's Merval stock index has rallied 65 percent this year after last
year's 50 percent slump. It's little changed over the last 12 months. A
return to emerging market status would bring back about $10 billion in
foreign funds to the market, Gabbi said. Argentina's stock exchange had
average daily trading volume of $13.5 million in the first five months of
the year, according to Bloomberg data.

While relaxing capital controls would be "a step in the right direction," it
wouldn't be enough to bring back international investors who sold stocks on
the government's policies, said Greg Lesko, who helps manage $625 million as
head of equity at Deltec Asset Management in New York.

"There's still enough political risk in Argentina to keep most investors
from getting terribly excited," Lesko said today in a telephone interview.
"It wouldn't make a big difference to me because that's not the biggest
reason why I'm not invested there. The way the country's being run is more
of an issue."

Colombia Restrictions

MSCI said in December it would keep Colombia classified as an emerging
market after the country removed restrictions on foreign investment in its
stock market. Colombia in September lifted requirements that foreigners
deposit 50 percent of stock and convertible bond investments with the
central bank for six months.

"The deposit requirement was imposed in 2005 and was one of the forces that
allowed us to confront the brutal volatility of the markets during the
crisis," Fernandez responded yesterday in a speech at the Buenos Aires stock
exchange.

Fernandez's husband and predecessor Nestor Kirchner imposed deposit
requirement in order to discourage speculators from investing in local
markets after the country restructured about $104 billion in bonds.

The measure aimed to cap a rise in the peso that would make Argentine goods
less competitive abroad. Argentina's currency has weakened 10 percent
against the U.S. dollar this year as other currencies in the region have
strengthened.

Fernandez said yesterday that the arrival of funds aimed at increasing
production and creating jobs in South America's second-biggest economy may
be excluded from restrictions.

To contact the reporter on this story: Eliana Raszewski in Buenos Aires at
[email protected]; James Attwood in Santiago at
[email protected]
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