Ualá CEO says Argentina dollarisation ‘positive’ for lending
Javier Milei’s proposal to dollarise the economy would be positive for long-term lending, according to Pierpaolo Barbieri, chief executive officer of fintech company Ualá.
Argentine presidential candidate Javier Milei’s proposal to dollarise the economy would be positive for long-term lending in the country where mortgages are largely inaccessible, according to Pierpaolo Barbieri, chief executive officer of fintech company Ualá.
A dollarisation of Argentina’s economy would also likely speed up the country’s shift into digital payments, which has accelerated since the pandemic, Barbieri added. Based in Buenos Aires, fintech Ualá offers a slew of financial services including prepaid cards and lending in Argentina, Mexico and Colombia. In its home country, it also offers investments in mutual funds as well as dollar purchases.
Dollarisation “would be actually very positive for the business and I think banks would be able to do longer term lending,” Barbieri said in an interview with Bloomberg TV’s Caroline Hyde and Ed Ludlow. “The opportunity for lending in places like Argentina is huge because only seven percent to eight percent of people have access to formal credit today. And in a dollarised economy I think that number would go up a lot.”
Barbieri pointed to the limited mortgage lending in a country with inflation running at about 120 percent.
Milei, the leading candidate before the October 22 presidential election, has promised voters he would shift Argentina from pesos to dollars, an economic proposal that mainstream economists in Buenos Aires have derided as unrealistic and risks sending the economy into hyperinflation because of the currency devaluation it would require. Milei has received some outside support for dollarisation, including from a former board member at the International Monetary Fund.
Barbieri stopped short of giving his personal opinion on dollarisation.
Most of Ualá’s revenue comes from Argentina, where the company expects to break even in the second half of this year, Barbieri said in February. The company has bet big in Mexico this year, securing a bank license after a merger with ABC Capital in Mexico and rolling out a high-yield savings account and credit card.
Ualá already offers some operations in dollars for customers in Argentina, and it pays a portion of employees’ salaries in greenback too.
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