Banco BBVA Argentina S.A. (BCBA:BBAR)
Argentina flag Argentina · Delayed Price · Currency is ARS
8,685.00
+480.00 (5.85%)
May 27, 2026, 2:20 PM BRT
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Earnings Call: Q1 2026

May 27, 2026

Operator

Good morning, everyone, and welcome to BBVA Argentina's first quarter 2026 results conference call. Today with us are Mrs. Belén Fourcade, Investor Relations Manager, and Diego Cesarini, IRO and Head of Asset and Liability Management. This presentation and the first quarter 2026 earnings release are available on BBVA's investor relations website, ir.bbva.com.ar, and will also be available for download in the chat. First of all, let me point out that some of the statements made during this conference call may be forward-looking statements within the meaning of the safe harbor provisions found in Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933 under U.S. Federal Securities Law. These forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed in the forward-looking statements.

Additional information concerning these factors is contained in BBVA Argentina's annual report on Form 20-F for the fiscal year 2025, filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. During the company's presentation, all microphones will be disabled. At this time, we are going to open it up for questions and answers. If you have a question, please write it down in the Q&A section or click on Raise Hand for audio questions. You will receive a request to activate your microphone. Please activate it and pick up your headset to provide optimum sound quality when posing your question. I will now turn the call over to Belén Fourcade. Please go ahead.

Belén Fourcade
Investor Relations Manager, BBVA Argentina

Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us today for BBVA Argentina's first quarter 2026 results conference call. During the first quarter of the year, our business model demonstrated resilience within a macroeconomic environment characterized by a gradual transition and the normalization of key financial variables. We observed a reduction in interest rate volatility, which sustained the downward trend initiated in the previous year, alongside ongoing adjustments in monetary and regulatory policy aimed at a better management of liquidity. While the combination of fiscal discipline and stabilizing external indicators establishes a more predictable framework for the financial sector, we maintain a cautious and prudent outlook regarding the pace, timing, and evolution of a broader private credit recovery in the upcoming quarters. Moving into our financial highlights for the quarter, BBVA Argentina posted an inflation-adjusted net income of ARS 85.2 billion for the first quarter of 2026.

This represents a 31.2% increase quarter-over-quarter, driven by revenue performance and expense management. This bottom-line expansion boosted our quarterly ROE to 8.3%. At the same time, net interest income grew by 5.9% sequentially to ARS 879.9 billion. Our funding costs fell faster than asset yields due to the shorter average life of our liabilities, expanding our total net interest margin to 18.6%. Regarding efficiency, our quarterly efficiency ratio stood at 51.4%, with personnel benefits and administrative expenses reflecting the ongoing management of our corporate structure. Let's look at the dynamics of our balance sheet and credit portfolio. Total financing to the private sector closed the quarter at ARS 15.7 trillion. While local currency loans fell 6.5% due to seasonal low commercial activity, our foreign currency private loans grew by 6.8% sequentially, which represents a 23.3% increase in dollar terms.

We continue to see continuous momentum in pledge and mortgage lines. Furthermore, we continue to capture business effectively, mainly driven by the commercial segment and foreign currency loans. Our consolidated loan market share rose to 12.15%, signaling a total gain of 95 basis points over the last 12 months. On the funding side, total deposits reached ARS 17.5 trillion. Private deposits saw a minor seasonal 8 basis points market share dip to 9.93%, but they remain up 78 basis points year over year. Regarding asset quality, systemic pressures caused our non-performing loan ratio to rise to 5.60%, primarily driven by the retail card and consumer portfolios. However, commercial delinquency remained exceptionally well-behaved at just 0.50%. Our cost of risk dropped from 8.11% last quarter to 6.14%, partially thanks to our strengthened origination policies, leaving our coverage ratio at 88.41%.

Looking at solvency and liquidity, our liquidity ratio closed at a very comfortable 45.5%. More importantly, our capital position remains robust with a regulatory capital ratio of 18.8%, representing 128.7% excess over minimum regulatory requirements. Before opening the floor to your questions, I want to highlight that on May 15, the Central Bank approved our dividend distribution for ARS 69 billion, which underscores our unyielding commitment to generating shareholder value. BBVA Argentina enters the rest of 2026 with an exceptionally solid foundation. Backed by robust capital, healthy liquidity, and an expanding market footprint, we possess all the necessary tools to lead the market and supply credit as the Argentine financial system normalizes. Thank you for your time. Operator, please open the line for questions.

Operator

Thank you. We are now going to start the Q&A session. To ask a question, you can click on the raise hand button. Our first question comes from Tito Labarta with Goldman Sachs.

Tito Labarta
Analyst, Goldman Sachs

Hi. Good morning, Belén, Diego. Thanks for the call. Excuse me. My question, I guess, on the asset quality outlook. Seems you're getting a little bit more constructive there, although we're still seeing NPLs deteriorate, but provisioning levels came down. We saw coverage come down a little bit more. Just to understand how comfortable you are on the credit quality improving from here, should we already begin to see that in the second quarter? What would that then mean for loan growth? Do you expect loan growth to accelerate as you see that? Just to get a sense of the timing on how this credit cycle should evolve from here. Thank you.

Diego Cesarini
Investor Relations Officer and Head of Asset and Liability Management, BBVA Argentina

Hello, Tito. This is Diego. Thanks for the question. Well, as you say, we are a little more comfortable with asset quality, in this first quarter of the year. We have been able to make provisions at a below level of last quarter. There are certain one-off there, as we mentioned in our press release. We have a better rating on some wholesale customers that affected us positively. Besides that, I think that our origination policies are working, and we are starting to see the light at the end of the tunnel. Having said this, of course, the situation still remains a little difficult. For many quarters, in general, we have been thinking that the worst one was over, finally, then the solution was delayed.

We remain reasonably comfortable that during the second quarter, we were stabilizing, and we could probably see a better outcome than in the first one. Regarding loan growth, well, we have been reviewing downwards our expectations. We started the year thinking about the range of 25%-30% growth in real terms. Now, we are thinking of a range between 15%-20%. Of course, the first quarter of the year was not easy. Seasonally, it's not the best quarter of the year. Peso demand is low in the first quarter. Dollar demand was still strong. Second quarter probably will be a little better. In the second half of the year, we are seeing probably a better performance. Regarding the retail business, of course, consumer and credit cards will take longer to recover. We need to be comfortable for new origination.

Tito Labarta
Analyst, Goldman Sachs

Okay. That's very helpful. Thank you, Diego.

Diego Cesarini
Investor Relations Officer and Head of Asset and Liability Management, BBVA Argentina

You're welcome.

Operator

Our next question comes from Brian Flores with Citi.

Brian Flores
Analyst, Citi

Hi, team. Good morning. Thank you for the opportunity. Maybe a follow-up on Tito's question. If you could provide maybe an update across the lines, Diego, on the guidance. We know we saw some interesting dynamics on the deposit side. I don't know if you could maybe double-click there as to what is happening. We saw very, I would say, competitive dynamics in terms of the funding in dollars. Just wanted to check if this is seasonality, if this is everybody fighting for these dollar deposits. Also, if you could provide your outlook for the overall NIMs, because we see that they were expanding maybe despite the challenges, right? Just trying to understand how sustainable do you think these good margins should be throughout the year. Thank you.

Diego Cesarini
Investor Relations Officer and Head of Asset and Liability Management, BBVA Argentina

Okay. Hello, Brian. Well, starting with the guidance of deposits, probably we could adjust that guidance, regarding how much we are growing on loans. Many years have started slow on loan growth and then the year performed better. In the first quarter, of course, we saw a difficult dynamic in deposits. We reduced our size in real terms, but that is not to worry, in our opinion, because, of course, as loan demand was not picking up, we needed less deposits, so we were not fighting for commercial ones, especially. Regarding dollar deposits, they are growing slowly, but constantly. We are seeing a 2%-3% monthly growth. It's true that banks, the retail side of the business, is still buying dollars every day. We are keeping a portion of those deposits.

We are not really fighting for deposits, as I think that banks, in general terms, are still liquid. Loan to deposit in dollar terms is still, at a systemic level, probably below 50%, so there's still some room for banking industry to grow in dollar loans without having to fight for more deposits. We are being able to issue also local bonds at reasonable rates. I see a good dynamic, if you ask me, in this part of the business. Regarding NIMs, nominal NIMs have increased around 100 basis points in this quarter, but it's also true that inflation was also higher. We like to measure NIMs in real terms, and they have been mostly flat in the first quarter. They have grown, I guess, 15 basis points.

We have seen this real term NIM very stable, not just in the last quarter, but in the last year and even more than a year. We are expecting that behavior for the coming quarters. We expect next quarter to be also flat or maybe a little positive because inflation is going down. For the second semester, probably we could see, if inflation still keeps going down and rates follow that path, we could see a little deterioration in NIM. But in real terms, I would say that it will be a very similar year to last one. We think that net interest income is a positive contributor to the recovery of ROEs for this year.

Brian Flores
Analyst, Citi

No, perfect, Diego. Just to confirm, your ROE range is reiterated for 2026?

Diego Cesarini
Investor Relations Officer and Head of Asset and Liability Management, BBVA Argentina

Yes, we keep that guidance. We have been talking about low to mid-teens. We keep that guidance, probably closer to low than to mid, but we are still there.

Brian Flores
Analyst, Citi

No, perfect. Thank you.

Operator

Our next question comes from Pedro Offenhenden with Latin Securities.

Pedro Offenhenden
Analyst, Latin Securities

Hello. Good morning, Carmen, Diego, Belén. Thank you for taking my questions. I wanted to do a follow-on on a question on coverage. How should we think it going forward? It's maybe a goal or a target for the bank to bring it back closer to the previous levels.

Diego Cesarini
Investor Relations Officer and Head of Asset and Liability Management, BBVA Argentina

Pedro, how are you? Well, we have seen our coverage ratio in line with the whole financial system going down a little below 100%. Probably, we are seeing the bottom of that ratio, and we should start seeing a recovery on that ratio in the coming quarters. We do not have a specific target. We do not have a specific timeline, but we know that it should go back at least to 100% in the coming future.

Belén Fourcade
Investor Relations Manager, BBVA Argentina

Hello, Pedro, this is Belén. I just wanted to add to what Diego was saying regarding coverage. There is not a specific number right now that we have in mind in terms of re-buffering that level of coverage. We are still focused on the needs that we have on provisioning. We are still not passed through the fall in the NPL matters and on cost of risks. Again, remember that coverage will always be rebuilt as long as we consider that it makes sense for us to increase cost of risk in change of that. Again, as Diego said, the system is at our same level. We are not worried on these levels of coverage.

Pedro Offenhenden
Analyst, Latin Securities

Perfect. Thank you, Belén, Diego. If I might add on NPLs, how did you see asset quality, maybe through the quarter? It was January, February, much different from March, or it was an acceleration, maybe equally between months?

Diego Cesarini
Investor Relations Officer and Head of Asset and Liability Management, BBVA Argentina

No. In March, I think that there was this acceleration. We are seeing that trend to continue. Probably April could be a little above March, but still mainly flat. From then on, we should see NPL stable for a couple of months and then starting to come down until we reach a level by the end of the year that could be a little below of what we are seeing right now.

Pedro Offenhenden
Analyst, Latin Securities

Thank you, Diego.

Diego Cesarini
Investor Relations Officer and Head of Asset and Liability Management, BBVA Argentina

You are welcome, Pedro.

Operator

Please hold while we poll for questions. Our next question comes from Carlos Gomez-López with HSBC.

Carlos Gomez-López
Analyst, HSBC

Hello, and good morning. You have probably commented on this already, but can you tell us how the quarter is coming along? We're already in the middle, actually, at the end of May. We saw this negative growth in the first quarter. You have lower rates. You have perhaps a more stable framework. Are you starting to see demand come back, and if so, in which areas? Thank you.

Diego Cesarini
Investor Relations Officer and Head of Asset and Liability Management, BBVA Argentina

Hello, Carlos. This is Diego. Well, the quarter started slowly, even with lower rates, in terms of ARS activity. In the last couple of weeks, we have seen more demand or more questions from the part of companies regarding ARS loans. When deposit rates were around 30-something, there was no interest in ARS loans. Now that deposit rates have fallen to a 20-something level, we are seeing more interest from companies. We are expecting a pickup in demand, mainly in commercial loans. As I said before, seasonally, the first three or four months of the year are usually very low on ARS demand, starting in May with tax payments and next month when companies pay the aguinaldo, the half complementary salary that they pay, we usually start to see a better demand in ARS.

Regarding dollar, of course, there have been pretty good demand in the first four months of the year. On the contrary, in May, we are seeing a little more calm in this currency.

Carlos Gomez-López
Analyst, HSBC

In terms of the dollars, if I can ask, in the past, you have had continuous purchase by retail investors of physical dollars. How has that evolved in the last couple of months?

Diego Cesarini
Investor Relations Officer and Head of Asset and Liability Management, BBVA Argentina

Retail investors have been buying U.S. dollars since all the regulations were lifted one year ago. Of course, we are not seeing the same level of demand that we saw in the third quarter of last year, but I would still say that it's high compared with historical levels. We are not at the highest, of course, but people are still buying and saving in U.S. dollars mainly.

Carlos Gomez-López
Analyst, HSBC

Thank you very much, Diego.

Diego Cesarini
Investor Relations Officer and Head of Asset and Liability Management, BBVA Argentina

You're welcome, Carlos.

Operator

Our next question comes from Matias Cattaruzzi with Adcap.

Matias Cattaruzzi
Analyst, Adcap

Hi, team. How are you? I have two questions. First, how do you see the TAMAR trajectory over the coming quarters? Do you expect peso NIM to hold or lower? Do you have an NPL guidance for year-end 2026? What is the view on GDP growth and a potential recovery in real wages in the second part of 2026?

Diego Cesarini
Investor Relations Officer and Head of Asset and Liability Management, BBVA Argentina

Hi, Matias. I will start with TAMAR. We have seen a pretty strong decrease in TAMAR rates through March and April, probably. That has provided good fuel for our NII, as, of course, we have shorter-term liabilities than assets. What we are seeing is that this negative level of interest rates, of course, is not sustainable. Probably, we are seeing it coming to a neutral level or something close to neutral in the coming months, mainly because inflation is going down more than the TAMAR going down. Probably, we are expecting TAMAR to be in line with inflation for the coming months. Inflation keeps going down, TAMAR could go marginally down, not too much. I think that the big movement has already been done, this year at least. Regarding peso NIMs, as I was saying before, it has remained pretty stable in real terms.

We are expecting it nominally to fall a little as interest rates go down. When you consider that inflation is also going down, we are seeing a smaller loss on our net income on inflation. It's reasonable to say that peso NIMs will hold pretty stable in the coming quarters. Probably a little down, no more than 50 basis points or 100 at the most. Regarding NPL, we are not providing a specific guidance. As I said before, we think that it will be a little lower than the levels that we have seen at the end of this first quarter. It should be around 5%, we guess, or a little below. Regarding GDP, we are expecting 3%. I think that you have made another question.

Matias Cattaruzzi
Analyst, Adcap

Sorry, about real wages recovery.

Diego Cesarini
Investor Relations Officer and Head of Asset and Liability Management, BBVA Argentina

Well, real wages should recover as inflation is going down, we guess. I think that one of the main reasons why real wages decreased in the latest last year was the pickup in inflation. We are expecting a reversal on that trend. We are pretty confident generally on the outlook. This first quarter has brought a lot of good news for the financial system and the country, we think that those good news should start to have an impact soon.

Matias Cattaruzzi
Analyst, Adcap

Great. As a follow-up, are you seeing a real interest rate in the coming quarters, but tighter than before?

Diego Cesarini
Investor Relations Officer and Head of Asset and Liability Management, BBVA Argentina

Real interest rates, we are expecting them to come back to neutral levels.

Matias Cattaruzzi
Analyst, Adcap

Neutral. Okay.

Diego Cesarini
Investor Relations Officer and Head of Asset and Liability Management, BBVA Argentina

More as a consequence of inflation going down than TAMAR going up.

Matias Cattaruzzi
Analyst, Adcap

Okay. Thank you so much.

Diego Cesarini
Investor Relations Officer and Head of Asset and Liability Management, BBVA Argentina

You're welcome.

Operator

Our next question comes from William Barranjard with Itaú BBA.

William Barranjard
Analyst, Itaú BBA

Thank you for the presentation. I have two quick ones. First, on your recently done layoff program, if you could share with us the amount of savings you're expecting from it. A second one, still on loan growth. If you could go through the year, in terms of expectations of growth, when it accelerates, and what is the amount expected for growth, if any, in the second half of the year? Those are the two ones.

Diego Cesarini
Investor Relations Officer and Head of Asset and Liability Management, BBVA Argentina

Okay. Thanks, William. Regarding our layoff program, it's not really a program, I would say. The bank, in the latest two years, as a part of our growth plan, we've been very aggressive in growth. We have grown more than 400 basis points in loans through the last three years without having acquired any entity. In fact, we are the bank that has grown the most in the Argentinian financial system without buying or merging with another bank. We have been growing in payrolls. Now, this quarter, we are making a little efficiency, but it's usual business. Probably in the coming quarter, you could also see some more layoffs. As I said before, it's not a part of a program, it's just the usual business. Sometimes we grow, sometimes we go down on employees. Savings will impact relatively quick.

I think that it's less than approximately a year or 15 months. In that time, we recover what we have paid for those layoffs. In terms of loans, as I was saying, we are expecting every quarter to be a little better than the previous one. At the beginning, the focus, of course, will be on the commercial side, on bigger companies and medium-sized companies. Dollar demand, even if I said that May was coming a little soft, we are expecting to pick up quickly. We have many companies looking for dollar loans. Many projects were there. On the retail part of the business, we are more focused right now on our mortgages. Mortgages have shown a really low impact in NPLs. They are still at a very low level. People are paying. We are originating mortgages very cautiously with loans to value that are very safe.

We are not slowing down on mortgages. We were the only bank that, in the fourth quarter of last year, kept our very competitive prices, we are still leading the recovery in this market. The same with pledges, even if in car loans, even if the first quarter was not as big in new demand. We are partners with four brands, we have a substantial portion of the new car loans. We still want to be there. It's the same as in mortgages. We think that the retail demand of loans should be rotating from consumer, which consumer has had an abnormal portion of banks' portfolios in the past years as a consequence of the economic situation.

As stability is growing in Argentina, we should see that these investment lines, like cars or mortgages, should take a bigger part of our portfolio in the future. As I said before, probably this is not the year to be that aggressive in general terms in retail business. We have been growing very fast in the past two years. We grew more than 80% in real terms in 2024. We grew almost 50% last year. It doesn't really matter if this year we are growing 20%, 15%, or 25%. It's the same. We intend to keep growing in the country, and there is a lot of room to keep going. We are not really in a hurry, especially in the retail business, until general conditions start to improve.

William Barranjard
Analyst, Itaú BBA

Okay. Thank you very much.

Diego Cesarini
Investor Relations Officer and Head of Asset and Liability Management, BBVA Argentina

You're welcome, William.

Operator

Our next question comes from Martín Argento with Delta Asset Management. Sir, you can open your microphone. I believe he's having some technical issues. Sir, can you open your microphone? We're gonna go ahead to-

Martín Argento
Analyst, Delta Asset Management

Hello. Now you hear me? Sorry.

Operator

Yes, we can hear you.

Martín Argento
Analyst, Delta Asset Management

Problem with the microphone.

Operator

Go ahead.

Martín Argento
Analyst, Delta Asset Management

Yeah, sorry. Hi. Thanks for taking my question. I have a few quick questions. First, on efficiency, the ratio came in 51% this quarter. Partly, I know that impact by this one-off severance, where do you see the efficiency ratio landing by year-end, and what's the steady state in the long term now? The other question is about ROE. You have guided to mid-teens for 2026, I know it's tough to give a number for 2027, given the election cycle. Directionally, where do you see ROE in the longer term now, when the cycle fully normalized, if you imagine? Related with this, how much of drag is RECPAM for ROE nowadays? That's the questions.

Diego Cesarini
Investor Relations Officer and Head of Asset and Liability Management, BBVA Argentina

Okay. Thanks, Martin, for the question. Regarding efficiency, well, last year as a whole, our efficiency was 53.9%. Last quarter of last year was really low, but because of one-offs probably. When you compare to this first quarter, you see a spike in the ratio that jumps to 51%. It also, as you mentioned, has some one-offs. For the whole year, for this year, we are expecting to be much better than the previous one as our fees are improving. We have been improving in fees. We have been improving in NII, of course, as we have been mentioning for some quarters. Our expenses are under control. We are expecting a better performance of this ratio. Probably it will be, the year as a whole, below 50%.

I could say that it could be around 48%, 49%, but it should be a substantial improvement compared to the past years. In the future, we need, of course, to keep improving on this ratio. It's still very high. We do not have a specific target, yet we know that banks, of course, and our bank is going to keep growth in place. Volume should offset the fall in NIMs, and fees should keep going, and as I said before, expenses should be kept under control. The trend for this ratio is that it will keep going down. Regarding ROE, yes, it's very difficult, as you said, giving guidance for coming years, as we do not have a track record of normal years, as I like to say, in Argentina.

We have been living under regulations and many regulations that have kept us from having normal banking activity. We know that we still have a lot of room to grow. We are confident that we'll reach higher ROEs. We know that when hyperinflation accountancy, when we get rid of that, we do not have a specific date for that. We know that Argentina could possibly comply with one of the requirements. That is, having an accrued inflation over the last statistics must be below 100%. That requirement could be met by the end of next year. It doesn't necessarily mean that the Central Bank is going to rule that we can get rid of that kind of accountancy. Of course, that makes us, right now, not comparable to banks in other geographies.

If we had to compare with a Brazilian or a Peruvian or a Colombian bank in countries where inflation is running among 3% and 4% or 5%, well, when we saw ROEs from those geographies, you should subtract 2%, 3%, 4% from those ROEs to make them comparable with banks in Argentina. The impact, the precise impact, let's suppose that in 2028, we are without that adjustment. The impact, it's difficult to consider because it will depend on how high inflation is at that moment. If inflation is running at 3%, let's say, it's difficult, but the impact will be small. If inflation is still running at 10%, 12%, the impact will be much higher.

Just trying to make it brief, we think that we have a lot of room to keep improving on our ROE, and we know that if we want to, even if we are very comfortable with our capital position, we know that if we want to be a bigger bank in a bigger financial system, we have to deliver on ROE. That's very clear for us.

Operator

Our next question comes from Marcos Serú with Allaria.

Marcos Serú
Analyst, Allaria

Hi. Good morning. Thank you for taking my question. It is about NPLs. The central bank rules require to classify a loan as non-performing, even if that client isn't non-performing with you, but it is delinquent with another bank. I wanted to know how much of the NPL you reported is driven by this cross-bank reclassification rule, and how much is clients that are actually delinquent with the bank. Also, another question, if you could separate the deposits and loan growth, sorry, guidance between ARS and USD. Thank you.

Belén Fourcade
Investor Relations Manager, BBVA Argentina

Hello, Marcos. Thank you for your question. The first part, regarding what you said about having in stage three on IFRS or stage three and over on the Central Bank classification, this only applies for commercial loans, not for individuals. I think you mean this rule where you have to classify a client as non-performing if they are non-performing in another bank. This only applies for commercial, and we have had almost nothing. Our commercial NPL is below 1%, and the only maybe worsening, but that we are already seeing an improvement by April was with some SMEs, but we don't have any particular client or that is substantial to your question and to our provisionings. I think that's what you meant in this case, if I'm not mistaken.

Marcos Serú
Analyst, Allaria

Yes. Perfect.

Diego Cesarini
Investor Relations Officer and Head of Asset and Liability Management, BBVA Argentina

Okay. Regarding the other question, Marcos, of course, we are seeing stronger growth on USD deposits and loans than in pesos for this year. Regarding pesos, Central Bank monetary policy has been very restrictive in the last couple of years. As a system, deposits have not grown in the last two years. The bank, BBVA, yes, we have grown a lot. We have gained market share, for this year, which is not especially strong, as I was mentioning in local currency, we are expecting both deposits and loan growth in local currency of around 10%-15% in real terms. Of course, that means that we are seeing a strong second half of the year, because the year started very slow. Regarding USD, we are seeing deposit growth of around 30%, and loan growth of around 40%.

Operator

Our next question comes from Brian Flores with Citi.

Brian Flores
Analyst, Citi

Hi, team. Thank you for the opportunity of circling back here. I think we didn't touch on the regulatory side. Just wanted to check with you because we know that the government has been really, I would say, flexibilizing some of the measures. Just wanted to check with you if there's any short-term, low-hanging fruits that the banking system as a whole is still asking for in terms of support on the regulation side. Diego, I think maybe the idea we get from what you mentioned today, along with Belén, is that, we are seeing more of a normalized cycle, right, in terms of credit. Just, you spoke a bit on, I would say, some better trends on, I wouldn't say very optimistic trends, but better trends in terms of credit demand.

If you could maybe, in your view, provide a view of what is missing here as the missing piece to maybe turn the whole cycle around in a more, I would say, strong way given the solid initial traction that we are seeing.

Diego Cesarini
Investor Relations Officer and Head of Asset and Liability Management, BBVA Argentina

Thanks, Brian. Regarding your first questions about regulations, we all know what happened in the third quarter of last year and all the reserve requirement regulations that were put in place. That meant, of course, interest rates going up very, very quickly. The impact that it had in our NIIs and all the difficulties we had operationally, because it was very difficult to comply on those reserve requirements on a daily basis. Those regulations have been mainly removed. I think that made sense. It was on the Central Bank agenda that as soon as elections were over, they were going to dismantle all this, and they have complied with that. We are seeing an environment of less volatility, rates going down. Everything has normalized pretty well. There are minor issues.

Of course, reserve requirements are still very high in Argentina, even if not the 100% of those requirements mean necessarily some harm to our incomes. If you consider local currency, reserve requirements reach 30% of our deposits, but just 1/3 of that, we complied on a Central Bank account at zero rate, and the remaining 2/3 of those requirements are met with bond positions that we would hold anyway. What we assume is that whenever a loan demand in ARS pick up and Central Bank is comfortable regarding the path of inflation, they will start to release these abnormally high reserve requirements. In the meantime, I have to say that we have more liquidity. We have free liquidity. We have enough liquidity to grow, even if Central Bank doesn't decrease this level of requirements in the short term. We are not worried about liquidity.

We think that we still can gain some market share in local currency and, of course, in foreign currency, too. Liquidity is not really an issue. To complete your question regarding all other regulatory issues, I think that there's nothing really very important, very substantial. We are always talking, and Central Bank is always willing to receive our comments on small issues. I think that the system is working really good right now. Regarding what is needed to normalize the cycle of credit, I think that we should bear in mind that a lot of things are happening in Argentina and not everything has its effect that quick. We come from many decades of doing things wrong from the economic and institutional and political points of view. Just to have to bear in mind, a lot has happened in the past four or five months.

Argentina has passed two or three very important reforms, labor reform, Glacier Law amendment. We have the new RIGI. We have passed a budget. The Central Bank has started buying USD. A rating agency has improved the rating of the country. We keep the fiscal load, and inflation keeps going down. Argentinian companies and some sovereigns have been issuing plenty of USD in foreign markets. We have lower rates. We have lower taxes for exports. I'm probably forgetting a lot of things good that are happening to Argentina, and that probably those things will start to have an effect on activity soon. Probably we are a little anxious regarding how quick this can happen, but we have to bear in mind that we come from many decades of mismanagement on these issues. I think that we are on the right path.

Eventually, things will start to get better. Of course, I cannot tell when this is going to happen, having lower rates, just to give an example, and lower inflation in the coming months and quarters probably should prove to be two very good pieces of news for our short-term activity. We think that, of course, when we originate, just to take the example of retail business, of course, we keep originating retail loans at a much lower extents than a year ago. We are giving those loans to our best customers, let's say, at lower rates. Those loans are proving to behave better. They are behaving really good. With time, we will start to be a little more loose on how we can keep originating those kinds of loans. We will be making proofs, and eventually, we will get more comfortable with this origination.

Of course, we are not in a hurry. As I said before, we have been growing fast in the past two years. We have gained a place of relevance in the financial system. We are number two bank in market share in private loans. We were number four, three or four years ago. All this without having acquired any other entity. We are very confident that we are on the right path.

Operator

Thank you. This concludes today's Q&A. I would now like to hand the floor back to BBVA's team for closing remarks.

Diego Cesarini
Investor Relations Officer and Head of Asset and Liability Management, BBVA Argentina

Okay, thanks. Well, I want to thank again for joining. We are really pleased, as we said, at how BBVA has been able to carry out our strategy in a context that all of you know that has not been the ideal in the last three quarters, and especially having been able to make the necessary tactical amendments to our strategy. We know that we have been able to keep our growth strategy, as I said. We have shown for our second quarter in a row with a sequential improvement in our net income, though we are still very far from what we think is our potential.

Of course, we remain very focused and confident that with all these reforms that are taking place in the country and the better financial conditions that we are starting to see these quarters, we should be soon able to resume growth and keep this path of improvement in our financial performance. That's all, and thanks again for joining.

Operator

Thank you. This concludes today's conference call. You may now disconnect.

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