The Global X MSCI Argentina ETF Has Had A Shockingly Good 200% Run

The Global X MSCI Argentina ETF Has Had A Shockingly Good 200% Run


An aerial, high-angle view of Buenos Aires at dusk. The tall, white Obelisco monument, illuminated with pink light, stands prominently in the center-right. Surrounding it are multi-story buildings, busy streets filled with car traffic, and tree-lined avenues. The sky above transitions from a soft pink and orange near the horizon to a deeper purple.
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  • ARGT has returned 233% over five years but delivered only single-digit gains in 2025 after peaking in November.

  • MercadoLibre comprises 21.4% of the portfolio and trades at 49x earnings.

  • Monthly inflation has fallen from over 200% annually to around 2% under Milei’s reforms.

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The Global X MSCI Argentina ETF (NYSEARCA:ARGT) has delivered a 233% gain over the past five years, riding optimism around President Javier Milei’s radical economic reforms. But recent performance tells a different story. After surging to overbought territory in early November, shares have cooled to around $91, posting modest single-digit gains in 2025. The question now is whether Milei’s reforms can sustain the momentum that fueled this extraordinary run.

An infographic titled 'Global X MSCI Argentina ETF (ARGT): Overview of an Argentine Reform Play'. It's divided into three sections. Section 1, 'How the ETF Works,' explains it tracks the MSCI Argentina Index, with key holdings including 21.4% MercadoLibre (MELI), Argentine Banks & Energy, and direct exposure to the Argentine market and reforms, noting performance reflects Milei's economic reforms. Section 2, 'Most Suitable Use Case,' depicts a person with a thought bubble showing an upward arrow and peso symbol, listing use cases: investors bullish on Milei's reforms, betting on disinflation and stability, seeking high growth in emerging markets, with a warning for high risk tolerance. Section 3, 'Pros and Cons,' presents a green 'Pros (Bullish)' box with points like high growth, direct market access, and potential for rapid gains (with an upward arrow), and a red 'Cons (Bearish)' box with extreme concentration risk (MELI), high political/regulatory uncertainty, and vulnerability to currency crises (with a downward arrow). The bottom notes 'Monitoring: Inflation, Reserve Levels, Peso Exchange Rate.'
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The biggest macro factor for ARGT is Argentina’s inflation trajectory. Milei inherited annual inflation exceeding 200% when he took office in December 2023. His aggressive fiscal austerity has brought monthly inflation down to around 2%. That’s impressive progress, but month-over-month inflation has proven sticky at this level, propped up by peso weakness and delayed effects of previous price controls being lifted.

Monitor Argentina’s monthly inflation reports from the National Institute of Statistics and Census, released around mid-month. If inflation accelerates beyond 2.5% monthly, it signals the reform program is losing credibility. Equally important are the central bank’s reserve levels and the peso’s real exchange rate. An overvalued peso helps anchor inflation but crushes exports and prevents reserve accumulation, creating conditions for the kind of currency crisis Argentina has experienced repeatedly. Watch for quarterly IMF reviews and any shifts in exchange rate policy, particularly around whether Argentina will eventually dollarize its economy.

ARGT’s concentration risk is extreme. MercadoLibre (NASDAQ:MELI) represents 21.4% of the portfolio, making the ETF’s performance heavily dependent on a single stock that trades at 49x earnings. When MercadoLibre stumbles, ARGT feels it immediately. The e-commerce and fintech giant has delivered roughly 20% gains in 2025, underwhelming compared to its historical growth rates as profit expansion slows.

Beyond MercadoLibre, the ETF tilts heavily toward Argentine banks and energy companies. These sectors benefit directly from Milei’s market-friendly policies but carry significant political and regulatory risk. Review the ETF’s monthly holdings file on the Global X website to track sector allocation shifts. Pay attention to the combined weight of financials, which includes Grupo Financiero Galicia, Banco Macro, and Banco BBVA Argentina. If banking exposure creeps above 20%, the ETF becomes more vulnerable to credit events or unexpected policy changes.

The iShares MSCI Argentina and Global Exposure ETF (NYSEARCA:AGT) tracks the same underlying index as ARGT with an identical 0.59% expense ratio. The key difference is size. AGT holds just $3.1 million in assets compared to ARGT’s $791 million, resulting in wider bid-ask spreads and lower trading volume. For most investors, ARGT’s superior liquidity makes it the better choice.

The most important factor for ARGT over the next 12 months is whether Argentina can maintain disinflation without triggering a currency crisis, while the key micro signal is MercadoLibre’s ability to sustain growth as it matures.

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