Peru heads into a knife-edge presidential runoff on Sunday after Keiko Fujimori and Roberto Sánchez held their closing rallies and the country entered its pre-vote quiet period. Bolivia’s blockade crisis eased slightly even as the death toll rose, Colombia’s race absorbed Donald Trump’s endorsement, and markets were mixed with Brazil closed for a holiday.
Peru — Two Days to a Close Vote
Keiko Fujimori and Roberto Sánchez held their closing rallies in Lima on Thursday night, ending a short and bitter campaign before Sunday’s presidential runoff. Fujimori filled the Arena Monumental in Ate, while Sánchez gathered supporters at the Campo de Marte after the city denied him the historic centre.
From midnight on Friday, campaign events are banned and the country enters its pre-vote quiet period, with all advertising barred from Saturday. The latest poll gives Fujimori a slim lead within the margin of error, and more than ten thousand schools have been handed over to election officials to serve as voting centres.
Bolivia — A Small Step Back
Bolivia’s crisis eased a little on Thursday as a major neighbourhood group in El Alto declared a truce to open a humanitarian corridor and the number of road blocks fell to about eighty-four. Even so, the death toll linked to the blockades rose to ten.
President Rodrigo Paz kept pressing his bill to let the army help clear roads while repeating his call for dialogue. The governor of La Paz urged a negotiated solution and called using the army a last resort, while Cochabamba’s mayor said the step should have come sooner.
Colombia — The Race Absorbs Trump’s Pick
Colombia’s electoral authority confirmed the first-round count is now fully complete, with Abelardo De La Espriella ahead of Iván Cepeda before the June 21 runoff. A European Union observer mission ruled out any manipulation of the results, lending weight to the official tally and easing fears of a contested outcome.
The race is still digesting President Trump’s public endorsement of Espriella, which Cepeda has called foreign interference and a risk to Colombia’s sovereignty. Regional observers urged both camps to keep the final stretch respectful as the two very different candidates court the voters who backed others in the first round.
Mexico — Holding the Line with Washington
President Claudia Sheinbaum kept up her measured pushback against US pressure this week after a report that Washington is investigating two Mexican state governors. She said the two men must answer for themselves and urged the United States to respect Mexico’s internal affairs and stay on the shared agenda.
Former president López Obrador reappeared with an open letter backing her without conditions and praising her steady, prudent handling of the relationship. Mexican officials repeated that most of the country’s exports to the United States stay free of tariffs under the regional trade deal, a point they have stressed through the talks.
Argentina — Shares Steady Again
Argentina’s main stock index edged up 0.33% to 3,174,511, recovering a little after two days of losses on a calmer global mood. In dollar terms the index sits close to its highest in more than a year, and the gauge investors watch for borrowing risk stayed near its best level under President Milei.
The recovery came as the central bank kept building up its dollar reserves after meeting its full-year buying goal. Analysts still note that everyday spending looks soft, with a recent drop in sales-tax revenue hinting that the recovery has not yet reached household budgets.
Brazil — Closed for the Holiday
Brazil’s markets were shut on Thursday for the Corpus Christi holiday, so there was no fresh trading and the last close stands at 170,330. Many businesses extended the break into a long weekend, leaving the week’s economic story to the figures released earlier and to the run-up to the central bank’s next meeting.
That earlier news was encouraging, with unemployment falling to 5.8%, the lowest for this time of year since records began in 2012. Attention now turns to the central bank’s interest-rate decision in the middle of June, with inflation forecasts still running above the official target.
Daily Briefing
Peru’s quiet period begins: From midnight on Friday, political rallies are banned and the country enters the stretch of calm before Sunday’s vote. Election officials have taken over more than ten thousand schools to use as voting centres through Monday.
Fujimori’s closing message: At her final rally Fujimori framed the choice as progress against going backwards, and unity against hate. She appealed directly to undecided voters to look past their differences and choose the future.
Bolivia’s humanitarian truce: A large neighbourhood federation in El Alto agreed to open a corridor so food, fuel and medicine can move again. The gesture offered the first real sign of easing after more than a month of blockades.
Bolivia’s new defence chief: President Paz swore in Ernesto Justiniano as defence minister after his predecessor resigned over the question of using troops. Paz framed any army role as humanitarian and kept the door open to talks.
Colombia’s count is final: The electoral authority confirmed the first-round scrutiny is fully complete, and EU observers found no sign of manipulation. The result now moves to the judge-led panels ahead of the June 21 runoff.
Cuba accepts US aid: Cuba agreed to take 100 million dollars in American humanitarian aid as its power crisis deepens and blackouts run long. A further tightening of US sanctions on a state company is due to take effect today.
Venezuela’s slow thaw: After Washington told prosecutors to step back from acting president Delcy Rodríguez, focus shifted to the gradual restart of the oil trade. Daily blackouts continue and water in Caracas remains limited to a few days a week.
Ecuador and Colombia settle: Ecuador’s removal of its steep tariff on Colombian goods is bedding in, protecting around three billion dollars in trade. Some border measures still need to unwind, and the two governments disagree on how the deal came about.
Mexico’s energy plan: Sheinbaum has flagged a coming deal between Pemex and Brazil’s Petrobras on deep-water drilling, likely this month. It fits a wider push to revive the country’s power and oil sectors.
Chile’s navy milestone: Chile’s plan to strengthen its state-owned arms makers moves ahead, with a new vessel, the Magallanes, due to launch on June 18. The programme was presented as part of President Kast’s recent address to Congress.
World Cup nears: The tournament opens June 11, with Brazil playing Morocco on June 14 and Argentina defending its title. Host cities across the region are preparing for a month-long boost to travel and spending.
Markets are mixed: Argentina rose while Mexico, Chile and Colombia slipped, and Brazil was closed for the holiday. A calmer global mood steadied some markets after a weaker run earlier in the week.
Country Risk Dashboard
Bolivia stays at the top of our scale even as the crisis eases slightly, with the death toll rising and the army question unresolved. Peru moves into sharper focus as the runoff nears, with a close race and a tense final stretch keeping its political score elevated.
Colombia stays high while the election and the dispute over Trump’s endorsement play out, and Cuba and Venezuela remain near the top on their deep energy troubles. Argentina is again the calmest in the group, while Mexico and Chile sit in the middle on a mixed market day.
What This Means
Peru’s vote is the region’s big event this week, and a close result could move its markets sharply either way on Monday. Bolivia’s small step back is welcome, but the country stays effectively closed to outside lenders until the crisis truly settles.
Argentina’s steadier tone held up well, and its borrowing-risk gauge near its best level under Milei remains the more lasting signal beneath the daily swings. Brazil’s holiday made for a quiet day, with the mid-June rate decision the next thing to watch; these are our editorial views, not investment advice.
What we’re watching this week
Who is favoured in Peru on Sunday?
The latest poll gives Keiko Fujimori a narrow lead over Roberto Sánchez, but the gap is within the margin of error. With campaigning now over, the quiet final days leave little room to shift undecided voters.
Is Bolivia’s crisis finally easing?
There were genuine signs of a step back, with a humanitarian truce in El Alto and fewer road blocks. But the death toll still rose and the fight over using the army is unresolved, so it is too early to call it over.
Does the count dispute still threaten Colombia’s vote?
The official count is complete and EU observers found no manipulation, which strengthens the result. The bigger question now is whether Trump’s endorsement helps or hurts Espriella with undecided voters.
Why was Brazil’s market quiet?
The exchange was closed on Thursday for the Corpus Christi holiday, so there was no fresh trading. The next big marker is the central bank’s rate decision in the middle of June.
What does Argentina’s rebound tell us?
The bounce came on a calmer global mood rather than any new development at home. The steadier borrowing-risk reading is the more lasting signal, though weak everyday spending is still a worry.
Read & Watch
Watch: Peru’s presidential runoff this Sunday between Keiko Fujimori and Roberto Sánchez.
Read: El Comercio and RPP on the closing rallies and the start of Peru’s pre-vote quiet period.
Read: Infobae and France 24 on Bolivia’s humanitarian truce and the rising death toll.
Watch: Whether Bolivia’s easing holds or the army question flares up again.
Watch: The World Cup opening on June 11, with Brazil and Argentina among the favourites.
Live Market IntelligenceLatin America — Cross-Market BoardInside: market breadth, the sector heatmap, currencies & rates, the Latin America scoreboard and the full instrument board.
Rio Times · Live Market Intelligence
Latin America — Cross-Market Board
Regional
Jun 5, 2026 · 03:27
Ibovespa · benchmark
170,331
-2.22%
+23.84% over 12 months
Market breadth · 5 names
20% advancing
1 ▲ advancing4 declining ▼
Currencies, rates & key inputs
USD / BRL
5.07
+0.06%
USD / MXN
17.28
-0.04%
USD / CLP
894.81
-0.10%
USD / COP
3,560
-0.42%
USD / ARS
1,437
-0.17%
Latin America scoreboard
IndexLastTodayStrength
IbovespaBrazil
170,331
-2.22%
S&P/BMV IPCMexico
67,392
-2.17%
S&P IPSAChile
10,304
-0.54%
S&P MERVALArgentina
3,174,511
-1.54%
MSCI COLCAPColombia
2,228.19
-0.48%
BVL S&P PerúPeru
34,836.62
+0.71%
Full instrument board
Instrument
Last
Change
YoY
Prev.
High
Low
Volume
IBOV
170,331
-2.22%
+23.84%
174,198
—
—
—
IPSA
10,304
-0.54%
—
10,360
—
—
—
IPC MEX
67,392
-2.17%
+17.24%
68,890
—
—
—
MERVAL
3,174,511
-1.54%
+49.25%
3,224,264
—
—
—
COLCAP
2,228.19
-0.48%
—
9.04
9.05
9.02
4,133
BVL PERÚ
34,836.62
+0.71%
—
—
—
—
—
USD/BRL
5.07
+0.06%
-10.02%
5.06
5.08
5.06
—
EUR/BRL
5.90
+0.14%
-8.24%
5.89
5.90
5.88
—
USD/MXN
17.28
-0.04%
-9.99%
17.29
17.29
17.26
—
USD/CLP
894.81
-0.10%
-4.57%
895.73
894.81
894.81
—
USD/COP
3,560
-0.42%
-13.31%
3,575
3,565
3,558
—
USD/PEN
3.40
+0.08%
-5.77%
3.40
3.41
3.40
—
USD/ARS
1,437
-0.17%
+21.20%
1,439
1,437
1,437
—
USD/UYU
40.36
+1.40%
-1.91%
39.81
40.36
40.36
—
USD/PYG
6,037
+0.53%
-23.32%
6,005
6,037
6,037
—
USD/BOB
6.86
+1.45%
+1.91%
6.76
6.86
6.86
—
USD/DOP
58.21
+0.88%
-0.19%
57.70
58.21
58.08
—
USD/CRC
456.90
+3.01%
-7.90%
443.54
456.90
456.90
—
Largest moves today
USD/CRC
456.90
+3.01%
IBOV
170,331
-2.22%
IPC MEX
67,392
-2.17%
MERVAL
3,174,511
-1.54%
USD/BOB
6.86
+1.45%
USD/UYU
40.36
+1.40%
USD/DOP
58.21
+0.88%
BVL PERÚ
34,836.62
+0.71%
The session read
The Ibovespa eased 2.22%, with breadth negative — 1 of 5 names higher. BVL PERÚ led, while IPC MEX lagged.
From The Rio Times
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