The bottom line
Colombia counts down to a knife-edge runoff. Campaigning closed over the weekend before the June 21 vote, and the last polls put the conservative Abelardo de la Espriella roughly eight points ahead of the leftist Iván Cepeda, in a final week soured by Cepeda’s accusation that his rival’s camp plotted a staged attack to sway the result.
The world is in a buying mood, and the Federal Reserve holds the next card. A relief rally that began last week has gone global, with Japan and South Korea setting records and the dollar easing in a backdrop that gently lifts Latin American currencies and shares, and all eyes now turn to the United States central bank, which meets on June 16 and 17.
Two slow crises grind on beneath the vote. Peru’s runoff is still unresolved, with Keiko Fujimori ahead of Roberto Sánchez by about eighteen thousand votes and no winner due until July, while Bolivia entered a forty-fifth day of road blockades as its main union federation weighed whether to dig in or talk.
The regional tape
Friday’s close · capture before Monday’s open
BR · Ibovespa
171,133
▼ 0.21%
the regional laggard
CL · IPSA
10,923
▲ 1.70%
copper stayed firm
CO · Colcap
2,386.78
▲ 1.53%
fresh highs before the vote
MX · IPC
67,955
▲ 1.46%
peso firmer near 17.16
AR · Merval
≈3.35M
▬ 0.01%
a breather after the record
BR · USD/BRL
5.06
▬ 0.00%
steady before the Fed
US · S&P 500
7,431
▲ 0.50%
Wall Street drifted higher
Oil · Brent crude
83.49
▼ 4.40%
war premium kept draining
Levels and moves are same-session captures read against The Rio Times’ LatAm Pre-Open for Monday, June 15, taken before Brazil’s market open; the local indexes and the dollar-real reflect Friday’s official closes, since the new week’s local sessions had not opened at capture time. Our Colcap close of 2,386.78 is firm, but its percentage move is reported differently across feeds, so we show the conservative reading and flag the spread, while the S&P 500 and Brent figures come from the Pre-Open’s global scan.
The big picture · a vote, and a friendly wind
Latin America begins the week caught between the ballot box and a tailwind from abroad. Colombia is days from a presidential runoff that has turned tense and personal, while a worldwide rally and a softening dollar quietly lift the region’s markets and currencies.
The contrast is the story. On one side sits democratic drama, with Colombia’s June 21 vote and Peru’s frozen count holding the region’s attention; on the other sits a calm, almost cheerful financial backdrop that has little to do with local politics at all.
A week that turns on two questions: who wins in Bogotá, and what the Federal Reserve says in Washington.
That second force is the one investors will track most closely. A relief rally that started with a Middle East ceasefire and cooler United States inflation has broadened into a global advance, and the United States central bank’s meeting on June 16 and 17 is now the swing factor for whether the good mood lasts into the summer.
For all the noise of campaigns and crises, the region’s near-term fortunes may rest on a single decision made far from it. A reassuring message on interest rates would keep money flowing south, while any hint of higher-for-longer rates could firm the dollar and pull it back.
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 15, 2026 · 03:16
Ibovespa · benchmark
171,133
-0.21%
L 169,993day rangeH 172,545
+24.19% over 12 months
Market breadth · 5 names
80% advancing
4 ▲ advancing1 declining ▼
Currencies, rates & key inputs
USD / BRL
5.06
0.00%
USD / MXN
17.17
-0.13%
USD / CLP
898.70
+0.00%
USD / COP
3,490
+0.00%
USD / ARS
1,429
-0.05%
Latin America scoreboard
IndexLastTodayStrength
IbovespaBrazil
171,133
-0.21%
S&P/BMV IPCMexico
67,955
+1.46%
S&P IPSAChile
10,923
+1.70%
S&P MERVALArgentina
3,352,708
-0.01%
MSCI COLCAPColombia
2,386.78
+1.53%
BVL S&P PerúPeru
56,321.11
+7.67%
Full instrument board
Instrument
Last
Change
YoY
Prev.
High
Low
Volume
IBOV
171,133
-0.21%
+24.19%
171,497
172,545
169,993
—
IPSA
10,923
+1.70%
—
10,741
—
—
—
IPC MEX
67,955
+1.46%
+17.51%
66,977
—
—
—
MERVAL
3,352,708
-0.01%
+53.25%
3,353,008
3,390,505
3,341,045
—
COLCAP
2,386.78
+1.53%
—
9.04
9.05
9.02
4,133
BVL PERÚ
56,321.11
+7.67%
—
—
—
—
—
USD/BRL
5.06
0.00%
-8.60%
5.06
5.06
5.06
—
EUR/BRL
5.87
-0.06%
-8.21%
5.88
5.88
5.86
—
USD/MXN
17.17
-0.13%
-9.36%
17.20
17.29
17.15
—
USD/CLP
898.70
+0.00%
-1.66%
898.70
898.70
898.70
—
USD/COP
3,490
+0.00%
-14.71%
3,490
3,490
3,454
—
USD/PEN
3.40
-0.07%
-3.57%
3.40
3.40
3.39
—
USD/ARS
1,429
-0.05%
+21.13%
1,429
1,429
1,429
—
USD/UYU
40.54
+0.00%
+0.32%
40.54
40.54
40.54
—
USD/PYG
6,094
+0.00%
-22.19%
6,094
6,094
6,094
—
USD/BOB
6.85
+0.00%
+2.14%
6.85
6.85
6.85
—
USD/DOP
58.58
-0.17%
+0.81%
58.68
58.68
58.58
—
USD/CRC
451.82
+0.00%
-7.74%
451.82
451.82
451.82
—
Largest moves today
BVL PERÚ
56,321.11
+7.67%
IPSA
10,923
+1.70%
COLCAP
2,386.78
+1.53%
IPC MEX
67,955
+1.46%
IBOV
171,133
-0.21%
USD/DOP
58.58
-0.17%
USD/MXN
17.17
-0.13%
USD/PEN
3.40
-0.07%
The session read
The Ibovespa eased 0.21%, with breadth positive — 4 of 5 names higher. BVL PERÚ led, while MERVAL lagged.
From The Rio Times
Related coverage · 15 Jun 2026
LatAm Expat & Nomad Daily Guide — Monday, June 15, 2026
Read →
Deep dive · Colombia’s bitter final week
Colombia closed its campaigning over the weekend and now waits, on edge, for a runoff that will hand the presidency to a sharply different future depending on who wins. The conservative lawyer Abelardo de la Espriella faces the leftist senator Iván Cepeda on June 21, in a contest that has split the country down the middle.
The numbers favour the right, for now. Two polls released over the weekend put de la Espriella around eight points clear, near 52 percent to Cepeda’s 44, though Cepeda holds firm strongholds in Bogotá and the Pacific that could narrow the gap on the day.
The tone has curdled in the final stretch. Cepeda has accused his rival’s campaign of plotting a staged attack to sway the result and says he will take the claim to prosecutors, while electoral authorities have pleaded with both camps to accept the outcome and keep the peace.
Country by country
Colombia
A tense countdown to June 21.
The Colcap index held near fresh highs as campaigning closed before Sunday’s runoff between de la Espriella and Cepeda. Two weekend polls put the conservative roughly eight points ahead, but a fraud accusation between the camps has soured the final week.
Peru
Still no winner, weeks on.
With almost every ballot counted, Keiko Fujimori leads Roberto Sánchez by about eighteen thousand votes, a margin of a few hundredths of a point. Recount hearings grind on and the official proclamation is not due until mid-July, leaving the country in limbo.
Bolivia
A forty-fifth day cut off.
The country marked forty-five days of unrest and forty of road blockades, with seventy-eight cut points still choking five regions. The main union federation met to decide whether to deepen the protests or open talks with President Rodrigo Paz, who thanked the areas that had begun to clear.
Cuba
The lights keep going out.
The island’s fuel crisis deepened as a United States blockade cut the oil it depends on, with blackouts and shortages spreading. Hospitals report rising strain, and food and medicine production have fallen sharply.
Mexico
A World Cup under a trade cloud.
The country co-hosts the football tournament even as teachers’ protests dog the celebrations and a July 1 United States trade review looms. A firmer peso near 17.16 offered some relief as the global dollar eased.
Brazil
Lula heads to the G7.
President Lula travels to the Group of Seven summit in Canada, where he is expected to argue against protectionism and press on trade and a threatened European beef ban. At home the Bovespa lagged the region, slipping slightly before a closely watched rate decision this week.
Argentina
A pause after the surge.
The Merval idled near its record after last week’s powerful run, and the peso held steady close to 1,429 to the dollar. A police report that weakens President Milei’s account of a crypto scandal added a note of political risk to an otherwise strong macro story.
The risk dashboard
Our 1–5 read across ten countries · higher = more pressure
Country
Score
Pol
Fin
Sec
Mkt
Ext
What’s driving it
Bolivia
5.0
5
5
5
5
5
A forty-fifth day of unrest, with seventy-eight road blockades still choking five regions and no settlement in view.
Cuba
4.8
5
5
4
5
5
A fuel blockade has emptied the island’s tanks, deepening blackouts and shortages of food and medicine.
Colombia
4.2
5
4
4
2
5
The market holds fresh highs, but a bitter June 21 runoff between de la Espriella and Cepeda nears.
Peru
4.2
5
3
4
4
3
A runoff still unresolved: Fujimori leads Sánchez by about eighteen thousand votes, with no winner declared.
Venezuela
4.2
5
5
5
3
3
Entrenched but hollow under acting president Rodríguez, with United States relations cautiously thawing.
Mexico
3.6
3
4
4
3
4
A firmer peso helps, but teachers’ protests and a July 1 United States trade review hang over the market.
Ecuador
3.6
4
3
5
3
3
The security crisis grinds on while the economy steadies; politics calmer than its neighbours.
Brazil
3.4
4
4
3
3
3
Shares lagged the region before a rate decision, with the Selic still high near 14.5%.
Chile
3.0
3
3
3
2
3
Copper stayed firm and the IPSA extended its bounce; quiet institutional strength under Kast.
Argentina
2.4
3
3
2
1
2
The Merval idled near its record and reserves climbed, though a crypto-scandal report nicked Milei.
Scale: 1 calm · 2 favourable · 3 mixed · 4 elevated · 5 severe. Pillars: politics, finances, security, markets, outside ties. Updated weekly; drivers refreshed daily.
Trade & positioning views
The tailwind carries.
A global rally, a softer dollar and firm metals have removed several worries at once, and a reassuring Federal Reserve this week could let the advance run into the region’s stocks and currencies. Colombia’s market has already pushed to fresh highs, suggesting investors are looking past the political noise for now.
It fades.
The whole mood hangs on Washington, and any hint of higher-for-longer rates would firm the dollar and pull money back out of emerging markets. A contested Colombian result or a fresh flare-up in Bolivia could quickly add a political scare to a financial one.
What to watch — the Federal Reserve’s decision on June 16 and 17, Brazil’s own rate call this week, Colombia’s June 21 runoff, and Peru’s unresolved count. These are our editorial views, not investment advice.
The briefing · 12 things worth knowing
Colombia’s campaign closed. Public campaigning ended over the weekend before the June 21 runoff between Abelardo de la Espriella and Iván Cepeda, the contest that will replace Gustavo Petro.
The polls favour the right. Two weekend surveys put de la Espriella around eight points clear of Cepeda, near 52 percent to 44, with a small undecided slice still in play.
A fraud accusation flew. Cepeda accused his rival’s camp of plotting a staged attack to sway the vote and said he would take the claim to prosecutors.
The world rallied, led by Asia. Japan’s Nikkei and South Korea’s Kospi hit records as a relief rally went global, while the United States merely drifted higher.
The Federal Reserve is the week’s pivot. The United States central bank meets on June 16 and 17, the decision that will set the dollar’s path and the region’s tailwind.
Peru is still a coin-flip. Fujimori leads Sánchez by about eighteen thousand votes, a few hundredths of a point, with the official result not due until mid-July.
Bolivia hit forty-five days. Seventy-eight road blockades still choke five regions, and the main union federation met to decide whether to dig in or talk.
Cuba’s tanks ran dry. A United States fuel blockade emptied the island’s oil supply, deepening blackouts and shortages of food and medicine.
Lula heads to the G7. Brazil’s president travels to the Group of Seven summit in Canada to argue against protectionism and press on trade.
Mexican industry held its gains. Factory output stayed strong as the country co-hosts the World Cup, though a July 1 trade review still looms.
A crypto report dogged Milei. An Argentine police analysis weakened the president’s account of his promotion of a digital coin now under suspicion.
The World Cup rolls on. The tournament is under way across North America, drawing crowds and political attention from Mexico City to Buenos Aires.
Corporate pipeline · sector watch
Banks & markets. A softer dollar and the global rally kept lifting the region’s exchanges, with Colombia at fresh highs and Argentina’s banks idling near records after last week’s surge. Brazil’s central bank decision this week is the main test, with the Selic still high near 14.5 percent.
Energy & metals. Copper stayed firm on hopes for global growth, a steady tailwind for Chile and Peru’s miners, while oil kept sliding as the Middle East war premium drained away. Cheaper crude eases inflation worldwide, even as it squeezes the region’s oil exporters.
Trade & diplomacy. Mexico’s July 1 United States trade review and Brazil’s push at the G7 against protectionism framed the week’s commercial story. Both turn on how far Washington presses its tariff agenda through the summer.
The week ahead
Five dates that move the region
Jun 16–17
The Federal Reserve decides
The United States rate call is the swing factor for the dollar and the region’s tailwind.
Jun 16–18
Brazil sets interest rates
With the Selic near 14.5%, the decision is the week’s big local market test.
Jun 17
Lula at the G7
Brazil’s president joins the summit’s outreach session in Canada to press on trade.
Jun 21
Colombia votes
The presidential runoff between de la Espriella and Cepeda.
Mid-Jul
Peru’s proclamation
The official result is due only once recount hearings clear the closest of margins.
Frequently asked questions
Why is the market tape from Friday?
The new week’s local sessions had not opened when these levels were captured before Brazil’s market open. Friday’s official closes are therefore the latest prints across the region’s exchanges.
What is the single most important event this week?
The United States Federal Reserve meeting on June 16 and 17 is the swing factor by far. A reassuring message and a softer dollar would keep money flowing into the region, while a hawkish surprise could pull it back.
Who is going to win in Colombia?
The conservative Abelardo de la Espriella leads the leftist Iván Cepeda by about eight points in the last polls before the June 21 runoff. Cepeda still holds strongholds in Bogotá and the Pacific that could narrow the gap on the day.
Who is winning in Peru?
No one officially yet. Keiko Fujimori leads Roberto Sánchez by roughly eighteen thousand votes, and the formal proclamation is not expected until the middle of July.
What is happening in Bolivia?
The country has entered a forty-fifth day of unrest, with dozens of road blockades still cutting off supplies to several regions. Its main union federation is weighing whether to harden the protests or finally open talks with the government.
Read & watch
WatchThe Federal Reserve’s rate decision on June 16 and 17, and Brazil’s own call the same week.
WatchColombia’s June 21 presidential runoff and the closing tone between the two camps.
ReadThe Rio Times on Peru’s unresolved count and the slow road to a July proclamation.
WatchBolivia’s union assembly and whether the blockades harden or ease in the days ahead.
Companion: today’s Latin America Power Map (PDF) — the 14-nation power board and country profiles.
Sources & method. Market levels are same-session captures read against The Rio Times’ LatAm Pre-Open for Monday, June 15 — the local closes (Ibovespa, IPSA, Colcap, IPC, Merval) and the dollar-real, with the S&P 500 and Brent from the Pre-Open’s global scan and the Colcap move shown conservatively where feeds diverge. The 1–5 risk scores are The Rio Times’ own weekly read, and this is editorial analysis, not investment advice.
Regional reporting draws on The Rio Times and the major Spanish- and Portuguese-language outlets across June 13–15: Colombia’s runoff polls and campaign close, Peru’s contested count, Bolivia’s blockades and union assembly, Cuba’s fuel crisis, Mexico’s trade review and the World Cup, Brazil’s G7 trip and rate decision, and Argentina’s record run and crypto report.
View original source — Rio Times ↗

