Argentina’s peso strengthened past 1,400 per US dollar, even as the Iran war unsettles global markets. It was one of only two emerging market currencies to gain against the dollar in March, despite a broad selloff in developing FX. After more than a decade of persistent weakness, the turnaround is being driven by strong agricultural exports, rising energy shipments from the Vaca Muerta shale basin and increased dollar borrowing by local firms, including recent international bond sales. Seasonal harvest inflows and high commodity prices are boosting export revenues, with Argentina’s trade surplus surging early in the year. Capital controls are also limiting speculative outflows, anchoring the currency to real trade flows. Additional support comes from renewed access to global markets, helping the central bank build reserves. However, risks remain as inflation persists and bond spreads widen, raising questions about the sustainability of the peso’s strength.

The USD/ARS exchange rate rose to 1,382.0900 on April 10, 2026, up 0.01% from the previous session. Over the past month, the Argentinean Peso has strengthened 0.96%, but it's down by 28.55% over the last 12 months. Historically, the USDARS reached an all time high of 14850 in September of 2020. Argentinean Peso - data, forecasts, historical chart - was last updated on April 10 of 2026.

The USD/ARS exchange rate rose to 1,382.0900 on April 10, 2026, up 0.01% from the previous session. Over the past month, the Argentinean Peso has strengthened 0.96%, but it's down by 28.55% over the last 12 months. The Argentinean Peso is expected to trade at 1367.63 by the end of this quarter, according to Trading Economics global macro models and analysts expectations. Looking forward, we estimate it to trade at 1292.70 in 12 months time.



Crosses Price Day Year Date
USDARS 1,381.9800 -0.0145 0% 28.54% Apr/10
EURARS 1,618.4272 1.5904 0.10% 32.71% Apr/10
GBPARS 1,858.0030 1.4869 0.08% 32.11% Apr/10
AUDARS 975.6991 -3.0433 -0.31% 44.28% Apr/10
NZDARS 806.4210 -3.2896 -0.41% 30.22% Apr/10
ARSJPY 0.1153 0.0002 0.20% -13.66% Apr/10
ARSCNY 0.0049 0.000002 0.05% -27.03% Apr/10
ARSCHF 0.0006 -0.0000004 -0.08% -24.59% Apr/10
ARSCAD 0.0010 0.000002 0.18% -22.40% Apr/10
ARSMXN 0.0126 0.00002 0.15% -33.40% Apr/10
ARSINR 0.0671 0.0002 0.31% -16.26% Apr/10
ARSBRL 0.0037 0.000001 0.03% -32.52% Apr/10
ARSRUB 0.0557 -0.0004 -0.76% -28.13% Apr/10
ARSKRW 1.0748 0.0078 0.73% -20.42% Apr/10
ARSIDR 12.3769 0.0273 0.22% -20.89% Apr/10
ARSCZK 0.0151 0.00001 0.08% -27.46% Apr/10
ARSDKK 0.0046 0.00001 0.12% -25.28% Apr/10
ARSHUF 0.2333 0.0003 0.13% -30.95% Apr/10
ARSMYR 0.0029 -0.00001 -0.33% -30.79% Apr/10



Related Last Previous Unit Reference
Argentina Inflation Rate 33.10 32.40 percent Feb 2026
United States Inflation Rate 2.40 2.40 percent Feb 2026
Argentina Overnight Repo Rate 29.00 29.00 percent Mar 2026
United States Fed Funds Interest Rate 3.75 3.75 percent Mar 2026
United States Unemployment Rate 4.30 4.40 percent Mar 2026
Argentina Unemployment Rate 7.50 6.60 percent Dec 2025

Argentinean Peso
The USDARS spot exchange rate specifies how much one currency, the USD, is currently worth in terms of the other, the ARS. While the USDARS spot exchange rate is quoted and exchanged in the same day, the USDARS forward rate is quoted today but for delivery and payment on a specific future date.
Actual Previous Highest Lowest Dates Unit Frequency
1382.09 1381.99 14850.00 0.98 1990 - 2026 Daily

News Stream
Argentina Peso Strengthens Past 1,400 Despite Global Turmoil
Argentina’s peso strengthened past 1,400 per US dollar, even as the Iran war unsettles global markets. It was one of only two emerging market currencies to gain against the dollar in March, despite a broad selloff in developing FX. After more than a decade of persistent weakness, the turnaround is being driven by strong agricultural exports, rising energy shipments from the Vaca Muerta shale basin and increased dollar borrowing by local firms, including recent international bond sales. Seasonal harvest inflows and high commodity prices are boosting export revenues, with Argentina’s trade surplus surging early in the year. Capital controls are also limiting speculative outflows, anchoring the currency to real trade flows. Additional support comes from renewed access to global markets, helping the central bank build reserves. However, risks remain as inflation persists and bond spreads widen, raising questions about the sustainability of the peso’s strength.
2026-04-02
Argentinean Peso Slumps After FX Band Reset
The Argentine peso weakened past 1,450 per US dollar, nearing record lows as the central bank’s decision to link the FX trading band to inflation effectively accelerated the pace of depreciation and reset expectations toward a weaker nominal path. By replacing the pre-set 1% monthly crawl with adjustments tied to monthly inflation running near 2.5%, policymakers formally sanctioned faster peso losses, prompting corporates and households to bring forward dollar demand and increase hedging activity. At the same time, plans to rebuild depleted reserves through gradual dollar purchases while expanding the monetary base toward 4.8% of GDP reduced the Bank’s near term capacity to lean against currency pressure, particularly in a shallow FX market. These policy shifts collided with a fragile external position, sizable near term debt service requirements, and still limited reserve buffers, intensifying pressure at the upper end of the trading band.
2025-12-16
Argentine Peso Surges After Midterm Elections
The Argentine peso strengthened past 1,400 per US dollar, recovering from its October 24th record low of 1,492.2 after Argentina’s midterm elections delivered about 41% of the national vote to President Milei’s coalition and a materially larger congressional presence, which raised odds of credible fiscal consolidation, deregulation and privatization. That political clarity narrowed perceived sovereign risk and raised confidence that recent progress on inflation and the fiscal balance will be preserved. At the same time, a reported US support package of roughly 40 billion dollars, including a 20 billion dollar swap and matching private financing arrangements, supplied near term external liquidity that eased rollover pressures and allowed sovereign spreads and bond yields to tighten. The rally is powerful but conditional on continued fiscal discipline, timely reform implementation and sustained foreign financing.
2025-10-27