Key Highlights
- Comisión Nacional de Valores halted a high-yield peso stablecoin, classifying it as a security.
- The token ARGt promised returns up to 32% APR, triggering capital-markets oversight.
- Issuer Twin Finance and platforms must suspend offerings until regulatory approval.
Argentina’s market regulator, La Comisión Nacional de Valores (CVN), has ordered the suspension of a peso-denominated stablecoin after determining it qualifies as a security.
According to the official announcement, the action targets ARGt, a token pegged to the Argentine peso and issued by Twin Finance, which had been listed on the crypto platform Belo. Officials directed both the issuer and intermediaries to stop offering, listing, or facilitating transactions involving the asset until regulatory requirements are met.
High-yield triggered securities classification
At the center of the decision is the token’s advertised yield. The stablecoin reportedly offered returns of up to 32% annual percentage rate (APR) to holders. According to the regulator, promising profits tied to holding the asset transformed the product into an investment contract rather than a simple payment token.
Authorities concluded that the structure fits the legal definition of a negotiable security under Argentina’s capital markets law, specifically, an investment of money in a common enterprise with expectations of profit derived primarily from the efforts of others.
Issuer ordered to suspend activities
The ruling asks Twin Finance to cease operations with the token, including any public offering of the instrument, unless it obtains formal authorization. By framing the stablecoin as a security, regulators place it under the same disclosure, registration, and compliance standards applied to traditional financial products.
Moreover, the decision affects platforms that facilitated trading or distribution, reinforcing the regulator’s authority over intermediaries.
Banking system may still move toward crypto integration
Despite the enforcement action, Argentina’s direction on digital assets is still dynamic. In fact, a report from December 2025 indicated that the Central Bank of Argentina was planning regulations that would allow traditional banks to trade cryptocurrencies.
If implemented, this will be a major development for digital assets since it will bring them into the traditional banking sector. It will bridge the gap between traditional finance and digital assets.
Major action against Peso stablecoin
Officials described the move as a notable enforcement action, the first involving a stablecoin tied directly to Argentina’s national currency. The case establishes that yield-bearing features can alter the legal status of a stablecoin, even if the underlying asset is designed to maintain price stability.
This interpretation could reshape how similar products are structured in the country, particularly those marketed as savings tools in a high-inflation environment.
What it means
By treating a high-yield peso stablecoin as a security, regulators are signaling that products promising returns, even those tied to local currency, will face stricter oversight.
The ruling could limit the development of crypto-based savings instruments in the country while pushing issuers toward compliance with traditional capital markets rules.
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