Chile turns to the IMF
Chile has reached an agreement with the International Monetary Fund for a two-year Flexible Credit Line (FCL) arrangement, worth $18.5bn. The FCL differs from normal IMF programmes in that once agreed, there are no conditions for use and generally, they are seen as “precautionary” measures. Additionally, they are reserved for countries described by the IMF as having “very strong policy frameworks and track records in economic performance.” Chile, Colombia, Mexico, Peru and Poland have had FCL arrangements since their inception in 2009, while only Colombia has actually drawn on these resources.
The move looks significant for Chile, given the volatility seen in the peso this year and July’s announcement of a $25bn intervention programme by the central bank. International reserves at the central bank have fallen to $44.4bn from a peak of $55bn in October 2021, so the size of the FCL should provide a welcome but necessary extra buffer and offer some comfort to foreign investors who may have been concerned about the scale of FX interventions planned. The central bank only intends to draw on the FCL in an emergency, but if tapped it would augment the nation’s existing FX reserves.
Chile has been struggling this year with a widening current account deficit of over 8% of GDP on a rolling annual basis as of the second quarter of this year, driven by weakening terms of trade. Copper prices, a key export, have come off the boil after rallying through to April while surging energy prices have driven imports higher. Against this backdrop, the nation remains one of the stronger hard currency sovereign credits in the EM space, with A1/A/A- ratings, but has performed weaker than its rating peers this year, with dollar bond spreads around 50bp wider on average YTD. Overall this latest agreement with the IMF signals an acceptance that the external backdrop is difficult for Chile, but should be seen as a marginal positive.
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