Cerrado Gold Provides an Update on Fiscal Policy Changes in Argentina Including Removal of Currency Controls on April 14th
ACCESS Newswire · Cerrado Gold Inc.

In This Article:

  • Argentina set to remove Capital Controls or "el cepo" as of Monday, April 14

  • International Monetary Fund ("IMF") to provide new $20 Billion in funding

  • World Bank to Provide an additional support package of $12 Billion and the Inter-American Development Bank will provide a further $10 Billion over three years

  • Currency set to initially be allowed to float in the range of 1,000 -1,400 Pesos to the Dollar

  • New Policy will simplify capital flows for Cerrado's MDN mine and allow for dividends out of the country

TORONTO, ON / ACCESS Newswire / April 14, 2025 / Cerrado Gold Inc. (TSX.V:CERT)(OTCQX:CRDOF) ("Cerrado" or the "Company") is pleased to provide an update on recent fiscal policy changes that are underway in Argentina which should ease the overall flow of capital into and out of Argentina. It should be noted that not all the details of the new policy are fully available at this time.

On Friday, April 11 the IMF approved a new $20 Billion loan program for Argentina with $12 billion set to be available to the central bank this week. This new agreement has been sought by President Milei's government since taking office to reopen the country to foreign investments. Access to the IMF funds is set to bolster the Central Bank's foreign reserves as the country looks to defend against inflation as it aims to remove all Capital Controls in the near future. As part of the plan to remove controls, the Central Bank will eliminate most exchange restrictions on flows, unifying all current account flows, debt payments, foreign investment, and the accumulation of assets by individuals into a single foreign exchange market. As the initial step the government will remove this week the crawling peg that has for years artificially limited the peso's weakening. Instead, the Argentine currency will be allowed to trade freely within an initial range of 1,000 pesos to 1,400 pesos per dollar. On Friday, the peso traded at 1,097 to the dollar at the official rate, and at 1,375 at the unofficial "blue dollar" rate. The band will expand 1% each month.

As part of this phase of removing all Capital Control on Friday, the government announced companies will be able to repatriate profits out of the country as of 2025, subject to some restrictions and the use of the differential exchange rates or "dollar blend" used by exporters will be eliminated and the deadlines for the payment of foreign trade operations are to be relaxed. This is expected to attract new investment into Argentina. Funds from prior to 2025 will need to exchange the debt for dollar-denominated security bonds. Individual Argentines will also be able to legally exchange pesos for dollars without a US$200-monthly limit.