Markets & Finance · Andean
—The vote. Colombia chooses its next president on Sunday, June 21, in a runoff between the right’s Abelardo de la Espriella and the left’s Iván Cepeda.
—The favourite. Late polls give de la Espriella a lead of several points, and investors read him as the friendlier outcome for business.
—The currency. The Colombian peso has been the region’s strongest this year, trading well below where it started the month against the dollar.
—The rotation. A closely watched survey shows global funds pulling money out of Brazil and into Colombia and Argentina.
—The downside. Some analysts estimate the stock market could fall sharply, by as much as a third over time, if Cepeda wins instead.
—The wild card. The biggest risk is a disputed result, with the outgoing president having signalled he may reject a preliminary count.
Long before a single vote is counted in Sunday’s Colombia election, the country’s markets have already placed their bet — and they are betting, nervously, on the candidate they see as friendliest to capital.
What the Colombia election means for markets
On Sunday, Colombians pick a president in a runoff that has split the country sharply down the middle. The choice is between Abelardo de la Espriella, a combative right-wing lawyer running on law and order, and Iván Cepeda, a senator from the governing left.
For investors, the contest reads as a simple either-or. One candidate is seen as market-friendly, the other as a continuation of the current leftist government, and the country’s financial markets have spent weeks pricing in their preferred result.
Late opinion polls give de la Espriella a lead of several points, with one survey for a major newspaper putting him near fifty-three per cent against forty-five for Cepeda. Analysts caution that Colombian runoffs can swing hard in the final days, so the gap is no guarantee.
A strong peso and a rising market ahead of the Colombia election
The clearest sign of that confidence is the currency. The Colombian peso has been the strongest performer in Latin America this year, and the dollar now buys far fewer pesos than it did at the start of the month.
A strong peso signals that foreign money is flowing in, drawn partly by the bet on a business-friendly government. The country’s main stock index has held near the highs it reached after de la Espriella’s surprise first-round win, when shares jumped the most in more than six years.
The shift is showing up in how big investors position themselves. A closely watched survey of fund managers this month found them pulling money out of Brazil and tilting toward Colombia and Argentina, with Colombia displacing Chile as their favourite market in the Andean region.
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Colombia — Live Market Board
BVC · Bogotá
Jun 20, 2026 · 04:30
MSCI COLCAP · benchmark
2,502.96
+4.02%
L 9.02day rangeH 9.05
Market breadth · 9 names
67% advancing
6 ▲ advancing3 declining ▼
Currencies, rates & key inputs
USD / COP
3,436
-0.66%
Brent crude
80.59
+0.93%
WTI crude
76.54
-0.08%
Sector heatmap · average move today
Energy
+5.81%
ECOPETROL
Industrials
+1.86%
TECNOGLASS
Financials
+1.29%
BANCOLOMBIA, GRUPO AVAL, CREDICORP
Other
+0.50%
BRENT, WTI, SOUTHERN COPPER
Mining
-4.85%
BUENAVENTURA
Latin America scoreboard
IndexLastTodayStrength
IbovespaBrazil
168,334
+0.03%
S&P/BMV IPCMexico
67,705
-0.82%
S&P IPSAChile
10,888
+0.47%
S&P MERVALArgentina
3,291,322
-1.26%
MSCI COLCAPColombia
2,502.96
+4.02%
BVL S&P PerúPeru
56,725.28
-2.20%
Full instrument board
Instrument
Last
Change
YoY
Prev.
High
Low
Volume
COLCAP
2,502.96
+4.02%
—
9.04
9.05
9.02
4,133
USD/COP
3,436
-0.66%
-15.54%
3,459
3,464
3,422
—
BRENT
80.59
+0.93%
+4.65%
79.85
80.82
78.80
14,021
WTI
76.54
-0.08%
+2.15%
76.60
76.78
74.98
86,466
ECOPETROL
16.58
+5.81%
+68.50%
15.67
16.76
15.28
5,612,696
BANCOLOMBIA
81.45
+1.89%
+88.63%
79.94
82.14
79.82
683,891
GRUPO AVAL
5.75
+3.05%
+102.46%
5.58
5.80
5.46
460,821
TECNOGLASS
45.97
+1.86%
-37.43%
45.13
47.64
45.56
413,180
CREDICORP
382.76
-1.08%
+75.23%
386.94
398.52
380.57
674,526
BUENAVENTURA
32.58
-4.85%
+101.36%
34.24
35.05
32.13
5,272,890
SOUTHERN COPPER
192.93
+0.65%
+113.96%
191.68
194.12
189.39
1,972,835
Largest moves today
ECOPETROL
16.58
+5.81%
BUENAVENTURA
32.58
-4.85%
COLCAP
2,502.96
+4.02%
GRUPO AVAL
5.75
+3.05%
BANCOLOMBIA
81.45
+1.89%
TECNOGLASS
45.97
+1.86%
CREDICORP
382.76
-1.08%
BRENT
80.59
+0.93%
The session read
The MSCI COLCAP rose 4.02%, with breadth positive — 6 of 9 names higher. Energy led, while Mining lagged.
From The Rio Times
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Why Colombia looks cheap to outsiders
Part of the appeal is simple value. Colombian companies trade at some of the lowest valuations in the emerging-market world, a discount built up during years of political worry under the current government.
The central bank has kept interest rates high to tame inflation, which rewards investors who hold the currency, and the government has been buying back its own debt to steady the market. For a foreign buyer, a cheap market plus a possible change of direction is a tempting combination.
That is the bullish case in a sentence: a low starting price, a strong currency and the prospect of a more investor-friendly leader. It is why money has been arriving before the result rather than waiting safely on the sidelines for it.
The risk on the other side
The danger in pricing a result early is that the result can disappoint. If Cepeda wins, the rally could reverse hard, and some analysts have estimated the stock market could give back as much as a third of its value over time as investors reprice the country’s direction.
There is a second, subtler risk that worries the desks more. The outgoing president, the leftist Gustavo Petro, has signalled he may not accept a preliminary count, raising the prospect of a disputed outcome that could unsettle markets regardless of who wins.
There is also a wider regional dimension that foreign investors are tracking. A de la Espriella win would extend a rightward, market-friendly shift already seen in Argentina, and would likely reset Colombia’s strained relationship with Washington on trade and security.
For a foreign investor, then, Sunday is less an event than a verdict on a bet already placed. The peso and the stock market have leaned hard one way, and the count will either reward that conviction or punish it.
Either way, the quiet positioning of recent weeks turns loud on Monday morning. Whatever the result, Colombia will wake up as one of the most closely watched markets in the region.
Frequently Asked Questions
When is the Colombia election runoff?
The presidential runoff is on Sunday, June 21, 2026, between Abelardo de la Espriella and Iván Cepeda. The winner takes office on August 7.
Why are markets reacting to the Colombia election?
Investors see de la Espriella as the more business-friendly candidate, so the peso and stock market have rallied on expectations of his win. The Colombian peso is the region’s strongest currency this year, and global funds have been rotating money into Colombia.
What happens to the market if Cepeda wins?
Some analysts estimate the stock market could fall sharply, by as much as a third over time, if the leftist Cepeda wins instead. A disputed result is a separate risk, as the outgoing president has signalled he may reject a preliminary count.
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