BUENOS AIRES, Argentina — Wall Street rallied Thursday as Argentina's President Javier Milei traveled to Italy for the Group of Seven summit, buoyed by his first legislative victory after the Senate passed sweeping proposals to slash state spending and boost his powers.
Having hitched his political fortunes to the goal of cutting down Argentina's bloated state, Milei hailed the vote as a ''triumph" and ''the first step toward the recovery of our greatness.''
Even so, opposition senators scrapped an income tax package and watered down other parts of the bill after a daylong debate marred by clashes between police and protesters in the capital of Buenos Aires.
The legislation aimed at overhauling Argentina's long-troubled economy during its worst financial crisis in 20 years will return to Congress' lower house for final approval, where it's expected to become law.
In a further boost to Milei's agenda Thursday, data released by the government statistics agency showed Argentina's monthly inflation rate halving to 4.2% in May, the lowest rate since January 2022.
The drop continues a trend of declining prices — on a monthly basis — since January, after Milei entered office and devalued the currency. That sent annual inflation soaring toward 300%, among the highest in the world.
The bill's passage cheered markets. Argentine sovereign bond yields jumped 3.5% on the news, and its country-risk index dropped more than 6% when markets opened. Argentina's currency, the peso, dipped to 1,220 for a dollar on the black market, narrowing the gap between the official and informal exchange rates.
In Thursday's early hours, Senate president Victoria Villarruel, Argentina's vice president, broke a 36-36 tie in the upper house to give overall approval to Milei's plans to trim the fiscal deficit, incentivize foreign investment and privatize some state-owned companies.