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ECONOMY | 21-12-2023 11:15

Milei sets up Aerolíneas Argentinas and YPF for privatisation

Milei announces slew of reforms that would allow tens of state-controlled firms, many of them money-losing, to be sold off. Among them, national airline Aerolíneas Argentinas SA and, after a "transition period," state energy firm YPF.

President Javier Milei took the first step to privatise state-run Argentine companies with a sweeping decree that opens the door for private business to take control of key sectors. 

Milei — a libertarian who wants to shrink government and deregulate to flip the switch on Argentina’s crisis-prone economy — announced a slew of reforms Wednesday night that would allow tens of state-controlled firms, many of them money-losing, to be sold off.

“Repeal rules that impede the privatisation of state companies,” Milei said in a televised message, listing the reforms in bullet points.

He added that all state businesses would have their legal structure changed to fully clear the path to privatisation.

Milei campaigned on this message, mentioning national airline Aerolíneas Argentinas SA, rail networks, state media companies, and water and sewage company AySA as assets to be sold to private operators. He also said he’d target state-run oil driller and refiner YPF SA and energy company Enarsa after a “transition” period.

The only company Milei singled out in his announcement was Aerolíneas Argentinas, which the government has spent hundreds of millions of dollars a year to prop up. He said he’d authorised a handover of shares — likely to employees — and would at the same time free up Argentina’s air-travel industry.

While Milei can seek to privatise companies by presidential decree, he’s nevertheless likely to face pushback in Congress, where his party is a minority, and may struggle to get enough votes to pass divestments through.

“I don’t see a scenario how this decree would be backed by Congress,” Paulo Farina, partner at the Buenos Aires-based Visviva consultancy firm, said in an interview. “It touches too many interests not to see a congressional coalition trying to reject it.”

With his privatisation push, Milei mimics a similar policy pursued by ex-president Carlos Menem, the market-friendly leader of the 1990s who sold several strategic assets in an attempt to downsize government after a period of hyperinflation. 

After a crippling crisis that peaked in late 2001, Argentina then opted to re-nationalise some companies in an era of leftist leaders. They took back AySa in 2006, Aerolíneas in 2008 and YPF in 2012. Milei, intent on slashing public spending and subsidies, wants to undo all that.

“We’d take nearly a couple of years to privatise YPF,” Milei told Bloomberg News during the campaign. “Because the company has been destroyed and selling it today at market prices would be to give it away. We need it to manage the transition to putting the energy sector in order.”

YPF and other Argentine energy companies have struggled with heavy regulation to protect consumers from currency devaluations that drive inflation, curtailing their revenues and investments.

The state oil company’s New York-listed shares still trade about 20 percent lower than when the government seized it in April 2012, taking control from Spain’s Repsol SA — even after Milei’s electoral triumph last month produced big stock-market gains.  

Complicating matters is a US court ruling earlier this year ordering Argentina to pay some US$16 billion after it botched technical steps during the nationalisation. The government has said it will appeal.

Nevertheless, YPF over the past decade has channelled its nationalistic role to successfully spearhead development of Argentina’s Patagonian shale riches, and it is leading plans for pipeline build-outs and liquefied natural gas exports.

Milei has tapped executives from the oil and steel empire of Argentine-Italian billionaire Paolo Rocca to lead YPF.

It may be harder to privatise YPF than some other companies since the 2012 nationalisation law contains a clause requiring two-thirds of Congress to approve selling the government’s shares, rather than just a simple majority.

by Jonathan Gilbert, Bloomberg

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