Key Facts
The COLCAP fell 1.93% to 2,347 on June 23 — a second straight drop extending the post-election unwind.
The peso strengthened to a multi-year high — the session’s key tell that money is not leaving Colombia.
This was profit-taking, not flight — froth from June’s record run came off while foreign demand held.
The energy heavyweight led the give-back — the same stock that powered the rally up weighed on it.
Momentum has reset, not broken — the index eased from a mid-June record near 2,472 back toward its averages.
Today’s Focus
Colombia’s market fell for a second day, with the COLCAP down 1.93% to 2,347, continuing to give back the powerful rally that carried it to records before the June 21 runoff. Having bet for weeks on a business-friendly win, investors got one — but by the narrowest of margins, and they have spent two sessions trimming positions since.
The detail that matters sits in the currency. While shares fell, the peso climbed to a fresh multi-year high, the dollar buying fewer pesos than at almost any point in years. A market that drops while its currency strengthens is not one investors are fleeing; it is one where the froth is coming off the share prices while the underlying bet on Colombia stays in place.
Inside the index, the give-back was led by the energy heavyweight that had powered the climb, a textbook unwind of the names that ran hardest into the vote.
What matters today. The peso is the variable to watch: as long as it holds its election gains, the equity market keeps a floor of foreign demand beneath it.
01 The session in one read
The COLCAP closed at 2,347, down 1.93% and about 46 points, after trading between roughly 2,339 and 2,395; it was the index’s second straight fall and left it well below the record near 2,472 it set in mid-June. The two-day pullback has now retraced a sizeable chunk of the surge that ran into the runoff, leaving the index back among the medium-term averages it had blasted through on the way up.
The decisive feature was the split between stocks and the currency. As shares fell, the peso strengthened to a fresh multi-year high — and a market that drops while its currency rises is not one capital is abandoning. That single divergence reframes the whole session: this is profit-taking on an overheated rally, not a verdict against Colombia.
Assessment — Profit-taking, not flight HIGH
The dominant force was an unwind of June’s election-driven surge, confirmed as froth-shedding rather than capital flight by a peso that strengthened on the same day. The variable to watch is the currency.
02 The day’s numbers
Measure
Level
Change
Read
COLCAP close
2,347
−1.93%
A second straight drop, unwinding the pre-vote run.
Session range
2,339–2,395
—
Sold from the open, closing near the low.
Currency (USD/COP)
3,417
−0.82%
Dollar down, peso firmer to a multi-year high — the key tell.
Momentum (daily)
~56
—
Eased from the low-70s record-run peak — a reset.
Distance below record
~5%
—
The mid-June high near 2,472 is the level to reclaim.
Read together, the table tells one story: a hot rally cooling off. The peso line is the one that matters most — a stronger currency on a down equity day strips out the fear narrative and marks the move as a healthy give-back rather than the start of an exodus. The currency line shows the dollar falling against the peso, which is peso strength.
Live Market IntelligenceColombia — Live Market BoardInside: market breadth, the sector heatmap, currencies & rates, the Latin America scoreboard and the full instrument board.
Rio Times · Live Market Intelligence
Colombia — Live Market Board
BVC · Bogotá
Jun 24, 2026 · 03:00
MSCI COLCAP · benchmark
2,347.07
-1.93%
L 9.02day rangeH 9.05
Market breadth · 9 names
0% advancing
0 ▲ advancing9 declining ▼
Currencies, rates & key inputs
USD / COP
3,417
-0.82%
Brent crude
76.38
-0.91%
WTI crude
72.59
-0.85%
Sector heatmap · average move today
Financials
-1.35%
BANCOLOMBIA, GRUPO AVAL, CREDICORP
Industrials
-1.71%
TECNOGLASS
Other
-2.58%
BRENT, WTI, SOUTHERN COPPER
Mining
-4.35%
BUENAVENTURA
Energy
-4.55%
ECOPETROL
Latin America scoreboard
IndexLastTodayStrength
IbovespaBrazil
171,259
+0.52%
S&P/BMV IPCMexico
66,848
-0.41%
S&P IPSAChile
10,770
-1.21%
S&P MERVALArgentina
3,248,428
-0.89%
MSCI COLCAPColombia
2,347.07
-1.93%
BVL S&P PerúPeru
57,045.35
-0.46%
Full instrument board
InstrumentLastChangeYoYPrev.HighLowVolume
COLCAP
2,347.07
-1.93%
—
9.04
9.05
9.02
4,133
USD/COP
3,417
-0.82%
-16.30%
3,445
3,419
3,414
—
BRENT
76.38
-0.91%
+13.76%
77.08
77.00
75.95
1,436
WTI
72.59
-0.85%
+12.77%
73.21
73.18
72.07
14,781
ECOPETROL
15.51
-4.55%
+65.00%
16.25
16.10
15.47
3,384,962
BANCOLOMBIA
80.97
-0.38%
+80.05%
81.28
80.99
79.49
473,208
GRUPO AVAL
5.31
-0.56%
+90.00%
5.34
5.40
5.26
614,777
TECNOGLASS
45.38
-1.71%
-40.01%
46.17
46.56
45.33
282,170
CREDICORP
368.77
-3.10%
+69.32%
380.57
378.45
368.53
444,281
BUENAVENTURA
31.00
-4.35%
+93.75%
32.41
31.60
30.63
1,174,470
SOUTHERN COPPER
178.57
-5.97%
+90.99%
189.91
182.97
176.48
1,151,260
Largest moves today
SOUTHERN COPPER
178.57
-5.97%
ECOPETROL
15.51
-4.55%
BUENAVENTURA
31.00
-4.35%
CREDICORP
368.77
-3.10%
COLCAP
2,347.07
-1.93%
TECNOGLASS
45.38
-1.71%
BRENT
76.38
-0.91%
WTI
72.59
-0.85%
The session read
The MSCI COLCAP eased 1.93%, with breadth negative — 0 of 9 names higher. Financials led, while Energy lagged.
03 Why it moved — selling the news, again
The single most diagnostic force was the gap between expectation and result. For weeks investors pushed Colombian shares to records on the bet that the market-friendly candidate would win the June 21 runoff with a clear mandate. He won — but by roughly a single percentage point, one of the closest results in the country’s history, leaving the pro-business reforms the market wanted looking far harder to pass through a divided legislature. With the good news long since priced in and the victory fragile, the rally had nowhere left to run, and a second day of profit-taking followed the first.
The transmission ran straight through the names that had led the climb. The energy heavyweight that powered the surge into the vote was the natural place to take profits, and its give-back pulled the index lower. But the move stopped at the water’s edge: the peso, far from selling off, strengthened to a multi-year high, the clearest possible sign that the capital that flowed into Colombia on the election bet has not turned around and left.
04 The day’s movers
Driver
Level / Move
Change
Note
COLCAP
2,347
−1.93%
Second day of the post-election give-back.
Peso (USD/COP)
3,417
−0.82%
Dollar down, peso firmer to a multi-year high — money is staying.
Energy heavyweight
Lower
−
The rally’s engine, now leading the unwind.
Distance from record
~5%
—
Below the mid-June peak near 2,472.
The story within the story is what did not happen. On a sharp down day for stocks, the currency went the other way — and that single fact is worth more than any individual share move, because it separates a healthy unwind of an overheated rally from the capital flight that a slim, contested mandate might otherwise have triggered.
05 The regional scoreboard
Index
Country
Change
Ibovespa
Brazil
+0.52%
IPC
Mexico
−0.41%
Merval
Argentina
−0.89%
IPSA
Chile
−1.21%
Colcap
Colombia
−1.93%
The board shows Colombia among the region’s weakest, but the reasons differ market by market. Brazil rose on cheaper oil and firm banks, Chile and Argentina eased on their own local threads, and Colombia fell on its post-election unwind. With currencies and stories pulling in different directions, there was no shared regional driver — Colombia’s drop was specifically the cooling of its own election rally, not part of a broad regional retreat.
06 The technical picture
Momentum has reset rather than broken. After the near-vertical climb to a record near 2,472 in mid-June, the daily gauge had stretched into the low-70s; the two-day pullback has eased it back toward the midline near 56, working off the excess of an overheated move without tipping into a deeper breakdown. The shorter-term trend measure is rolling over from its peak, consistent with a rally that has paused to digest rather than reversed outright.
The levels frame the next move. The index is sitting on its medium-term average cluster around 2,343 to 2,371, the immediate line that decides whether this is a pause or a deeper fade; below it, the 2,284 area and then the long-term trend line near 2,142 mark firmer support. Overhead, the mid-June record near 2,472 is the high a renewed push would need to reclaim to signal the rally has resumed.
07 What to watch
The peso: the cleanest signal of all — as long as it holds its election gains, foreign demand keeps a floor under the equity market.
The 2,343 support: the average cluster the index is sitting on, the line between a pause and a deeper give-back.
The energy heavyweight: the rally’s engine and the unwind’s leader, the first place renewed buying or selling would show.
The political follow-through: whether the narrow, contested mandate translates into a workable reform agenda once the new government takes office in August.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why did Colombia’s COLCAP fall on June 23, 2026?
The index fell 1.93% to 2,347, a second straight drop that extended the unwinding of June’s powerful pre-election rally. Investors had pushed Colombian shares to records on the bet that the business-friendly candidate would win the June 21 runoff; he did, but by about one percentage point, far short of the decisive mandate the market wanted. With the good news already in the price and the win looking fragile, traders kept taking profits, led by the energy heavyweight that had driven the rally up. Crucially, this was an equity story, not a flight from Colombia.
Why did the peso strengthen while stocks fell?
That split is the most important detail of the session. As the COLCAP dropped, the peso firmed to a fresh multi-year high, with the dollar buying fewer pesos. A falling stock market alongside a rising currency is not the signature of money leaving the country; it is the signature of profit-taking inside the equity market while foreign demand for Colombian assets stays intact. The peso has been Latin America’s strongest currency this year, and its continued strength says the bet on a more market-friendly government has not unwound, even as the share-price froth comes off.
Has the Colombian market run too far, too fast?
It had, and this is the correction. The index spiked to a record near 2,472 in mid-June on election hopes, a near-vertical climb that left momentum stretched. The pullback of the past two sessions has worked off much of that excess: the daily momentum gauge has eased from the low-70s peak back toward the midline, a healthy reset rather than a breakdown. After a gain of roughly ten percent in a matter of weeks, giving some back is the market digesting an outsized move, not reversing the trend.
What levels should investors watch next?
The medium-term average cluster around 2,343 to 2,371, where the index is now sitting, is the immediate battleground; holding it would suggest the rally is pausing rather than failing. Below that, the 2,284 area and then the longer-term trend line near 2,142 mark deeper support. On the upside, the record near 2,472 is the level a renewed push would have to reclaim. The peso remains the cleanest tell: as long as it holds its election gains, the equity market has a floor of foreign demand beneath it.
How did the rest of Latin America trade?
Colombia was among the region’s weakest, but it was not alone in falling. Chile’s IPSA dropped more than 1%, Argentina’s Merval eased and Mexico’s IPC slipped, while Brazil’s Ibovespa was the standout exception, edging to a fresh high on cheaper oil and firm banks. With currencies and local stories diverging, there was no single regional driver; Colombia’s decline was its own post-election unwind, distinct from Brazil’s oil-led gain or Chile’s softer session.
Connected Coverage
This report continues The Rio Times’ daily coverage of Colombia’s market: see the prior session, Colombia’s Stock Market Plunges as a Thin Election Win Disappoints, and the result itself in De la Espriella Wins Colombia Election, Markets Cheer a Fiscal Squeeze. For the wider regional picture on a day Brazil bucked the trend, see the Global Economy Briefing, and the run-up that set the stage in Colombia Stock Market Hits 2,406 High: Banks Lead June 19.
Reported by Richard Mann for The Rio Times — Latin American financial news. Filed June 24, 2026, covering the June 23 session. Index, currency and single-stock levels are session-close readings via the Rio Times market data feed (BVC and regional exchanges); technical readings are from the daily chart. Figures are point-in-time and not investment advice.
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