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Argentina did not discuss $20 billion bailout with banks, minister says

BUENOS AIRES (Reuters) -Argentine officials did not speak with U.S. banks about ​a $20 billion rescue package, the country’s ‌economy minister, Luis Caputo, said on Friday in a post on ‌social media.

Caputo made the comments after the Wall Street Journal reported on Thursday that a planned $20 billion bailout for Argentina from JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, and Citigroup ⁠, had been ‌shelved as bankers pivot instead to a smaller, short-term loan package.

“We never spoke with ‍the banks about a bailout, nor about 20 billion. It’s just another ‘operation’ whose only purpose is to ​create confusion,” Caputo wrote on X.

In October,‌ the U.S. Treasury reached a $20 billion exchange-rate stabilization agreement with Argentina, to be paired with a bank-led debt facility for the same amount. The deal came just days ahead of a midterm election ⁠that was crucial for Argentina’s libertarian ​president, Javier Milei.

Bankers now say ​the debt facility is no longer under serious consideration, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing ‍people familiar with ⁠the matter. Instead, lenders are planning to loan Argentina around $5 billion through a short-term repurchase,⁠ or “repo,” facility, it said.

(Reporting ‌by Eliana Raszewski; Writing by Brendan O’Boyle,‌ Editing by Natalia Siniawski)

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