
Trump spoke alongside Argentine President Javier Milei as the two leaders met on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly, a day after treasury secretary scott Bessent said all options were on the table for stabilising the Latin American nation’s financial markets.
“We’re going to help them. I don’t think they need a bailout,” Trump told reporters in New York.
“Scott is working with their country so that they can get good debt and all of the things that you need to make Argentina great again,” Trump added. He offered his endorsement for Milei’s re-election bid so that his counterpart has another term “to complete the job.”
Asked for more detail on the US efforts, Trump said, “We are giving the president of Argentina our full backing and endorsement.”
Bessent said on Monday that all options were on the table for the US to stabilise Argentina’s financial markets, including tapping the US$219.5 billion Exchange Stabilization Fund to buy pesos or Argentine dollar-denominated debt, or opening currency swap lines with Latin America’s third-largest economy.
Bessent had said any decision on specific US actions would come after he and Trump met with Milei, but there were no announcements by late Tuesday afternoon. A treasury spokesperson did not respond to a Reuters query about the meeting.
The US pledge of support for Trump’s right-wing ally Milei extended Monday’s rally in Argentina’s markets, as international bonds rose and the peso strengthened almost 5% against the dollar.
World Bank investments
Separately, the World Bank Group said it was accelerating its US$12 billion support plan for Argentina by deploying up to US$4 billion of the total over the coming months through public-sector financing and private-sector investment.
The development lender will prioritise projects in key areas such as mining, energy and tourism for early consideration by the bank’s executive board, a World Bank spokesperson said. The bank did not disclose specific projects to be funded.
Democratic US senator Elizabeth Warren on Tuesday accused Bessent of offering to bail out Argentina’s financial markets with American taxpayer funds, asking him in a letter to explain the move and to provide details of any expected costs.
“At a time when Americans are struggling to afford groceries, rent, credit card bills, and other debt payments … it is deeply troubling that the president intends to use significant emergency funds to inflate the value of a foreign government’s currency and bolster its financial markets,” wrote Warren, the top Democrat on the senate banking committee.