PING Capital Management sold 269,600 shares of BBAR in the fourth quarter; the estimated transaction size was $3.87 million based on average pricing in the quarter.
Meanwhile, the stake’s quarter-end value fell by $5.37 million, reflecting both trading and price movement.
As of December 31, the fund reported holding 780,900 BBAR shares valued at $14.11 million.
On February 2, PING Capital Management reported selling 269,600 shares of Banco BBVA Argentina (NYSE:BBAR), an estimated $3.87 million trade based on quarterly average pricing.
According to a February 2 SEC filing, PING Capital Management reduced its position in Banco BBVA Argentina (NYSE:BBAR) by 269,600 shares. The estimated transaction value was $3.87 million, calculated using the average closing price during the fourth quarter. Meanwhile, the fund’s quarter-end BBAR position decreased in value by $5.37 million, a figure that incorporates both share sales and price movements over the period.
Following the reduction, BBAR accounted for 4.1% of the fund’s 13F AUM.
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As of January 30, BBAR shares were priced at $20.22, down 9.3% over the past year and underperforming the S&P 500’s roughly 14% gain in the same period.
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Revenue (TTM) | $1.6 billion |
| Net income (TTM) | $178.61 million |
| Dividend yield | 1% |
| Price (as of February 2) | $20.22 |
Banco BBVA Argentina is a leading financial institution in Argentina, operating an extensive network of branches and digital channels to deliver comprehensive banking services. The company leverages its strong brand and diversified product offering to serve a wide customer base across retail, SME, and corporate segments. Its strategy emphasizes digital innovation and customer-centric solutions to maintain competitive positioning in the Argentine banking sector.
This move shows how emerging-market risk can be managed when fundamentals are improving but volatility refuses to cooperate. Plus, it’s important to note that cutting exposure here is not about exiting Argentina. It is about keeping individual positions aligned with portfolio construction.
Banco BBVA Argentina’s operating picture remains mixed. In the third quarter, the bank reported inflation-adjusted net income of AR$38.1 billion, down a sharp 39.7% quarter over quarter and 70.9% year over year, as higher interest rates pressured margins and loan loss provisions rose. Net interest margin fell to 16.7%, while the non-performing loan ratio climbed to 3.28%, driven largely by stress in the retail book. At the same time, deposits and private-sector loans continued to grow in real terms, and the bank maintained a 16.7% capital ratio, more than double regulatory minimums.
More broadly, this portfolio is heavily concentrated in Argentine exposure, with YPF and another domestic bank together accounting for nearly 40% of assets. Against that backdrop, trimming a single financial holding after a period of underperformance looks like risk control rather than lost conviction.
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Jonathan Ponciano has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.