A: Argentina has long been a flashpoint in global finance. The country’s repeated assurances of an economic turnaround often enticed U.S. banks and investors eager to profit. Instead, a trail of defaults and currency devaluations left foreign lenders chastened.
Wall Street reached these crossroads again with President Javier Milei, whose agenda of slashing government spending and regulations offered hope that Argentina was now, at long last, stabilizing. Investors crowded into trades involving Argentina’s dollar-denominated government bonds ahead of Sunday’s midterm elections.















