Key Facts
What the world’s markets decided. On the morning of the US Federal Reserve’s big decision, investors made a clear bet — they sold high-flying technology and bought banks. Chipmakers tumbled −5.92% and the tech sector fell −2.79%, while JPMorgan jumped +3.68% and the bank sector rose +1.48%.
Why the switch. US inflation came in hot at 4.2% for May, the third month in a row it has risen, which has flipped the market’s hope for interest-rate cuts into a fear of rate hikes. Higher-for-longer rates hurt expensive tech stocks and help banks, so money moved accordingly.
The tell in the indexes. The split showed up clearly — the tech-heavy Nasdaq fell −1.15% while the bank-and-industrial Dow rose +0.64%. When those two move in opposite directions, it is the classic sign of a rotation rather than a broad sell-off.
The clue in the wider scan. Oil kept crashing, with US crude and Brent both down about 4.7% as the US-Iran peace deal holds, even though the official inflation number ran hot. That gap — falling oil now, hot inflation data from May — is exactly the puzzle the Fed must judge today.
What it means for Latin America. The region steadied and waited — Brazil’s Bovespa eased just −0.45%, but Nubank rose +2.33% riding the global move into banks, and regional currencies firmed (Colombia’s peso +1.82%). Everything now hinges on the Fed’s words later today.
On the morning of the Fed’s decision, investors voted with their feet: out of expensive tech, into banks, because a hot 4.2% inflation reading has turned rate-cut hopes into rate-hike fears. The deeper puzzle is that oil is crashing even as the inflation number runs hot, and how new Fed chair Kevin Warsh reads that split this afternoon will set the tone for Latin America and the world.
01 Out of tech, into banks — the great rotation
The day before the US Federal Reserve’s decision, the market did something decisive. It sold the stocks that had led the rally and bought the ones that had lagged.
Technology took the hit. Chipmakers fell −5.92%, the broad tech sector dropped −2.79%, and Nvidia lost −2.37%, unwinding much of Monday’s big surge.
Banks were the mirror image. JPMorgan jumped +3.68%, the largest move in our entire scan, and the financial sector rose +1.48% as money rotated straight from one group into the other.
You could see it in the headline indexes. The tech-heavy Nasdaq fell −1.15% to 26,376 while the bank-and-industrial Dow actually rose +0.64%, the textbook signature of a rotation rather than a broad retreat.
The reason is interest rates. May inflation came in hot at 4.2%, the third straight month it has climbed, which has pushed investors to expect the Fed to keep rates high — good for banks, who earn more, and bad for pricey tech, whose future profits are worth less when rates stay up.
Asia, meanwhile, simply waited. With the Fed hours away, Tokyo edged up +0.83% and Seoul +0.82%, but most of the region barely moved, holding its breath for the decision. (Editorial note: the day-to-day links here are built from the price moves and the dated news; align with the prior published edition before filing.)
02 The mood dashboard
What we measure
Reading
30d Pct
In plain terms
Fear gauge (the VIX)
16.41
n/a
Ticked up +1.30% — a small dose of caution returning before the Fed.
The big rotation (banks vs tech)
wide
n/a
Banks soared while chips slumped — the defining move of the day.
Growth vs value
Dow up, Nasdaq down
n/a
Money left growth tech for steadier value names — a classic rotation.
Safe-haven demand (gold, bonds)
mild bid
n/a
Bonds firmed and gold held — a quiet, careful tone into the decision.
The big loser
oil −4.7%
n/a
Crude kept crashing on the peace deal, a disinflationary force.
Sector leadership
banks, energy out
n/a
Financials led; chipmakers and oil were the laggards.
The dashboard’s headline is the rotation. A market that sells its winners and buys its laggards the day before a Fed decision is repositioning, not panicking, and the calm fear gauge confirms it.
The second signal is the quiet bid for bonds. With government bonds firming and gold steady, investors are keeping a little protection on hand while they wait for the Fed’s words.
The most intriguing reading is the clash between oil and inflation. Crude is falling hard, which should cool prices, yet the latest official inflation number rose — and squaring that circle is exactly the Fed’s job today.
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 17, 2026 · 03:30
Ibovespa · benchmark
169,648
-0.45%
+21.82% over 12 months
Market breadth · 5 names
60% advancing
3 ▲ advancing2 declining ▼
Currencies, rates & key inputs
USD / BRL
5.09
-0.03%
USD / MXN
17.21
+0.05%
USD / CLP
885.79
-0.64%
USD / COP
3,426
-1.85%
USD / ARS
1,437
-0.02%
Latin America scoreboard
IndexLastTodayStrength
IbovespaBrazil
169,648
-0.45%
S&P/BMV IPCMexico
68,483
+0.40%
S&P IPSAChile
10,904
+0.23%
S&P MERVALArgentina
3,254,706
-2.92%
MSCI COLCAPColombia
2,371.18
-0.65%
BVL S&P PerúPeru
56,588.47
+0.20%
Full instrument board
InstrumentLastChangeYoYPrev.HighLowVolume
IBOV
169,648
-0.45%
+21.82%
170,415
—
—
—
IPSA
10,904
+0.23%
—
10,879
—
—
—
IPC MEX
68,483
+0.40%
+20.05%
68,208
—
—
—
MERVAL
3,254,706
-2.92%
+57.05%
3,352,708
—
—
—
COLCAP
2,371.18
-0.65%
—
9.04
9.05
9.02
4,133
BVL PERÚ
56,588.47
+0.20%
—
—
—
—
—
USD/BRL
5.09
-0.03%
-7.34%
5.09
5.09
5.09
—
EUR/BRL
5.91
+0.46%
-6.84%
5.88
5.91
5.91
—
USD/MXN
17.21
+0.05%
-9.06%
17.20
17.21
17.19
—
USD/CLP
885.79
-0.64%
-5.34%
891.50
885.81
885.79
—
USD/COP
3,426
-1.85%
-16.41%
3,491
3,434
3,424
—
USD/PEN
3.41
+0.19%
-5.17%
3.41
3.41
3.40
—
USD/ARS
1,437
-0.02%
+21.51%
1,437
1,437
1,437
—
USD/UYU
40.32
+0.69%
-0.07%
40.05
40.32
40.32
—
USD/PYG
6,069
+0.96%
-22.80%
6,011
6,069
6,069
—
USD/BOB
6.85
+1.65%
+1.49%
6.74
6.85
6.85
—
USD/DOP
58.37
+0.48%
-0.73%
58.09
58.37
58.27
—
USD/CRC
451.13
+1.85%
-8.26%
442.92
451.13
451.13
—
Largest moves today
MERVAL
3,254,706
-2.92%
USD/COP
3,426
-1.85%
USD/CRC
451.13
+1.85%
USD/BOB
6.85
+1.65%
USD/PYG
6,069
+0.96%
USD/UYU
40.32
+0.69%
COLCAP
2,371.18
-0.65%
USD/CLP
885.79
-0.64%
The session read
The Ibovespa eased 0.45%, with breadth positive — 3 of 5 names higher. IPC MEX led, while MERVAL lagged.
03 The Fed’s puzzle: crashing oil, hot inflation
The most important pattern in the scan is a contradiction. Oil is tumbling — US crude and Brent both fell about 4.7% and are now well below their levels of a week ago — which normally points to cooler inflation ahead.
Yet the official inflation reading went the other way. May prices rose 4.2% from a year earlier, up from 3.8%, the third straight monthly increase, because that data looks backward to a month when oil was still expensive.
That leaves the Fed with a genuine dilemma. The backward-looking number says inflation is too high and rates should stay up, while the forward-looking oil crash says relief is coming and rates could ease.
How new Fed chair Kevin Warsh resolves that split this afternoon is the whole game. The rate decision itself is all but certain to be a hold, so the market’s focus is on his tone and on the Fed’s fresh forecasts for where rates go next.
04 The gaps that tell the story
Comparison
Gap (points)
What it means
JPMorgan (+3.68%) vs chips SOXX (−5.92%)
+9.60
The rotation in one line — out of tech, into banks, before the Fed.
US Dow (+0.64%) vs Nasdaq (−1.15%)
+1.79
Value rose while growth fell — the clearest sign of a rotation.
Bonds TLT (+0.55%) vs oil Brent (−4.69%)
+5.24
Falling oil and firmer bonds both whisper that relief on inflation is coming.
Brazil’s Nubank (+2.33%) vs Argentina’s Banco Macro (−3.18%)
+5.51
LatAm banks split — Nubank rode the global bank bid, Argentina took a breather.
Bank sector XLF (+1.48%) vs tech XLK (−2.79%)
+4.27
Money moved sectors wholesale — financials in, technology out.
The widest gap — JPMorgan up nearly 4% while chipmakers fell almost 6% — is the day in a single number. It is a clean handoff from the market’s most expensive corner to one of its cheapest.
The bonds-versus-oil gap is the quieter but deeper signal. Both point to inflation easing ahead, which is the case the doves will make to the Fed even as the hot May number argues the other way.
05 The big picture: a high-stakes afternoon
The deeper story is that two opposite forces are arriving at once, and the Fed has to choose which matters more. Hot past inflation argues for keeping rates high, while crashing oil and a cooling economy argue for relief.
That is why the rotation happened now. Investors are hedging toward a world of higher-for-longer rates, where banks do well and expensive tech struggles, just in case the Fed leans hawkish this afternoon.
For Latin America, the stakes are high but the setup is not unfriendly. A balanced or reassuring Fed and a steady dollar would let the region keep drawing money, and its currencies have actually been firming — a sign investors are not fleeing.
The risk is a hawkish surprise. If the Fed’s forecasts push the next rate cut far into the future, the dollar could firm and pressure the region, which is why every word from the new chair matters today.
06 What currencies are telling us
Currency
Now
Move
In plain terms
Dollar vs Colombian peso
3,426
−1.82%
Peso jumped — a strong vote of confidence even with oil falling.
Dollar vs Chilean peso
886
−0.64%
Peso firmer again — copper-rich Chile keeps drawing money.
Dollar vs Brazilian real
5.09
−0.03%
Real steady — calm and waiting, like most of the region, for the Fed.
Dollar vs Mexican peso
17.20
−0.02%
Flat and firm — Mexico stays one of the region’s calmer stories.
Dollar vs Argentine peso
1,436
−0.02%
Flat — Argentina’s swings stay in its stock market, not its currency.
Euro vs dollar
1.16
+0.07%
Steady — the dollar is holding still ahead of the decision.
Currencies sent a reassuring message for the region. The Colombian peso jumped nearly 2% and the Chilean peso firmed again, both signs that money is still flowing toward Latin America rather than away from it.
That matters because a strong regional currency is the opposite of what you would see if investors feared a hawkish Fed. For now, at least, the currency market is leaning calm, with Brazil’s real and Mexico’s peso steady into the decision.
07 Crypto and commodities — the clues after the stock market closes
What
Now
Move
In plain terms
US crude oil
115.47
−4.74%
Kept crashing on the peace deal — a powerful, if delayed, force cooling inflation.
Gold
397.63
+0.27%
Held its gains — investors keeping protection on hand into the Fed.
Bitcoin
65,711
+0.17%
Flat near 65,700 — still waiting on the sidelines like everyone else.
Natural gas
11.76
+2.89%
Rose even as oil fell — a reminder the energy slump is really an oil story.
Copper
39.55
−0.25%
Steady — the growth read held firm while oil did the falling.
The commodity scan keeps pointing to oil as the week’s big mover. Crude fell almost 5% again as the US-Iran peace deal holds, and a sustained drop like this is one of the strongest forces for cooling inflation in the months ahead.
Crypto, as it has all week, stayed on the sidelines. Bitcoin hovered near 65,700 and barely moved, the same quiet caution that has shadowed the rally and that fits a market waiting on the Fed.
08 What it means region by region
Brazil: The Bovespa eased just −0.45% as oil names stayed soft (Petrobras −1.67%), but digital bank Nubank rose +2.33%, riding the same global move into banks that lifted JPMorgan. With the real steady near 5.09, Brazil looks balanced going into the Fed — soft on energy, firm on financials.
Mexico: Mexico edged up +0.37% and the peso held firm at 17.20, staying one of the region’s steadiest markets. With little oil exposure and a calm currency, it is well placed whichever way the Fed leans.
Argentina: Argentina’s banks took a breather after their huge run, with Banco Macro −3.18% and Galicia −2.72% on the global tech-and-risk wobble. The pullback is modest against double-digit gains, the peso is flat near 1,436, and the emerging-market upgrade story remains the country’s anchor.
Andes and Colombia: Currencies were the bright spot, with Colombia’s peso jumping +1.82% and Chile’s firming again, both signs of steady inflows. Colombia’s Ecopetrol even edged up +0.70% as the oil sell-off slowed, a tentative sign the worst of the energy pain may be passing.
09 What to watch through the day
The Federal Reserve (decision today): The whole session points here — new chair Kevin Warsh’s first decision, his tone, and the fresh rate forecasts will steer the dollar, tech and the region.
The dot plot: Watch whether the Fed’s own projections push the next rate cut into 2027 or leave a door open for later this year — that single detail could move everything.
Tech versus banks: Watch whether the rotation out of chips into banks extends after the decision or snaps back, a key read on how the market expects rates to go.
Oil: Crude keeps falling on the peace deal, easing inflation pressure — a steadying in oil would also steady Latin America’s energy names.
Latin American currencies: The Colombian and Chilean pesos are firming; if they hold after the Fed, it signals money is still flowing into the region.
Frequently Asked Questions
What did global markets decide overnight, in one sentence?
Ahead of the US Federal Reserve’s decision, investors rotated out of technology and into banks — chipmakers fell −5.92% and tech −2.79%, while JPMorgan jumped +3.68% — because a hot 4.2% inflation reading turned rate-cut hopes into rate-hike fears. Oil kept crashing on the US-Iran peace deal, and most of Asia and Latin America simply waited for the Fed.
Why did investors sell tech and buy banks?
It comes down to interest rates: when rates stay high, banks earn more, while expensive tech stocks become less attractive because their future profits are worth less today. With inflation rising for a third straight month, the market now expects the Fed to keep rates high for longer, so money moved from the group that suffers to the group that benefits.
Which event matters most for Latin America today?
The Fed decision this afternoon, without question — it is new chair Kevin Warsh’s first, and his tone and forecasts will set the direction for the dollar and the region. A balanced message would let money keep flowing into Latin America, whose currencies have been firming, while a hawkish surprise that strengthens the dollar would be the main risk.
What is the puzzle the Fed has to solve?
Oil is crashing right now, which points to cooler inflation ahead, but the official inflation reading just rose to 4.2% because it measures a month when oil was still expensive. The Fed must decide whether to trust the hot past data or the cooling forces building now, and how new chair Kevin Warsh frames that choice is what markets are waiting to hear.
Connected Coverage
The Brazil Morning Call that picks up where this piece leaves off is filed daily on the Markets desk. Argentina’s upgrade story is tracked on our Argentina desk, the wider regional picture on our Latin America markets page, Mexico in the Mexico desk, and the global backdrop in the Market Reports hub.
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