The Latin American Pulse · Wednesday, June 24, 2026 · The 60-second read
The bottom line
Brazil stands alone. As Wall Street’s artificial-intelligence trade cracked and a chip rout dragged the Nasdaq down 2.21%, foreign money rotated into Brazil’s cheap, bank-heavy market and cheaper oil lifted the lenders, sending the Ibovespa up 0.52% to 171,259, the region’s lone gainer for a second day.
The dollar pressed unevenly. A firmer dollar tied to US rates drove Argentina’s currency to a 2026 high near 1,471 and weakened Chile’s peso, yet Brazil’s real held steady near 5.18 and Colombia’s peso firmed to a multi-year high — one external force, many local outcomes.
Banxico takes the stage. Mexico decides interest rates on June 25 with its IPC easing to 66,848, while Colombia’s COLCAP fell hardest, down 1.93% to 2,347, as a recount fight shadows the August 7 handover.
The regional tape
Tuesday’s close · the markets snapshot
BR · Ibovespa
171,259
▲ 0.52%
the region’s lone gainer — a flight from US tech
MX · IPC
66,848
▼ 0.41%
a fifth down day on a firm dollar
AR · Merval
≈3.25M
▼ 0.89%
eased as the dollar hit a 2026 high
CL · IPSA
10,770
▼ 1.20%
a weaker peso and a lithium slide
CO · COLCAP
2,347
▼ 1.93%
the region’s worst — yet the peso firmed
BR · USD/BRL
≈5.18
steady
the real held firm near 5.18
US · S&P 500
7,365
▼ 1.44%
tech selling deepened; Nasdaq −2.21%
Oil · WTI
73.10
▼ 1.0%
cheaper after a US–Iran summit eased energy fears
Levels and moves are Tuesday, June 23 closes from The Rio Times’ market data — Ibovespa, IPC, IPSA, Merval and COLCAP. Brazil was the region’s lone gainer as foreign money sheltered from a Wall Street technology rout and cheaper oil lifted its banks, while a firmer dollar pressed unevenly — lifting Argentina’s dollar and weakening Chile’s peso, even as Brazil’s real held steady and Colombia’s firmed. Local indices are in points; the S&P 500 and oil in US dollars.
The big picture · one dollar, many outcomes
Latin America woke to a split screen. On one side, Brazil pulled off a quiet act of defiance: as a crowded run in artificial-intelligence and chip stocks finally cracked in New York, foreign investors went hunting for cheaper, steadier ground, and Brazil’s bank-heavy market — helped by cheaper oil after a US–Iran summit — lifted the Ibovespa 0.52% to 171,259 for a second straight gain.
On the other side stood the dollar, firmer on fresh worries about US interest rates. But its pressure landed unevenly: it drove Argentina’s wholesale rate to a 2026 high near 1,471 and weakened Chile’s peso, even as Brazil’s real held steady near 5.18 and Colombia’s peso firmed to a multi-year high.
One external force, a firmer dollar, pressed across the region — but each market answered with a story of its own.
The equity moves told the same tale of divergence. Mexico’s IPC eased 0.41% to 66,848 on the eve of a Banxico rate decision, Chile’s IPSA fell 1.20% as its peso slipped and lithium slid, and Colombia’s COLCAP dropped the hardest, down 1.93%, in a post-vote give-back that a firmer peso marked as froth coming off rather than flight.
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 24, 2026 · 03:50
Ibovespa · benchmark
171,259
+0.52%
+25.42% over 12 months
Market breadth · 5 names
0% advancing
0 ▲ advancing5 declining ▼
Currencies, rates & key inputs
USD / BRL
5.17
-0.12%
USD / MXN
17.55
-0.03%
USD / CLP
913.39
+0.76%
USD / COP
3,419
-0.70%
USD / ARS
1,471
-0.03%
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
Instrument
Last
Change
YoY
Prev.
High
Low
Volume
IBOV
171,259
+0.52%
+25.42%
170,370
—
—
—
IPSA
10,770
-1.21%
—
10,902
10,911
10,770
—
IPC MEX
66,848
-0.41%
+19.20%
67,125
—
—
—
MERVAL
3,248,428
-0.89%
+64.30%
3,277,512
—
—
—
COLCAP
2,347.07
-1.93%
—
9.04
9.05
9.02
4,133
BVL PERÚ
57,045.35
-0.46%
—
—
—
—
—
USD/BRL
5.17
-0.12%
-5.82%
5.18
5.19
5.17
—
EUR/BRL
5.88
-0.15%
-7.62%
5.89
5.91
5.88
—
USD/MXN
17.55
-0.03%
-7.99%
17.56
17.59
17.53
—
USD/CLP
913.39
+0.76%
-3.64%
906.54
913.39
913.39
—
USD/COP
3,419
-0.70%
-16.24%
3,443
3,419
3,413
—
USD/PEN
3.39
-0.11%
-5.89%
3.39
3.40
3.39
—
USD/ARS
1,471
-0.03%
+25.53%
1,471
1,471
1,471
—
USD/UYU
39.91
+1.09%
-1.04%
39.48
39.91
39.91
—
USD/PYG
6,064
+1.31%
-22.88%
5,985
6,064
6,064
—
USD/BOB
6.86
+1.82%
+1.55%
6.74
6.86
6.86
—
USD/DOP
58.38
+0.66%
-1.30%
58.00
58.55
58.10
—
USD/CRC
452.10
+2.42%
-8.23%
441.43
452.10
452.10
—
Largest moves today
USD/CRC
452.10
+2.42%
COLCAP
2,347.07
-1.93%
USD/BOB
6.86
+1.82%
USD/PYG
6,064
+1.31%
IPSA
10,770
-1.21%
USD/UYU
39.91
+1.09%
MERVAL
3,248,428
-0.89%
USD/CLP
913.39
+0.76%
The session read
The Ibovespa rose 0.52%, with breadth negative — 0 of 5 names higher. IPC MEX led, while COLCAP lagged.
From The Rio Times
Related coverage · 23 Jun 2026
Gold Slides and Silver Falls Harder as the Dollar Firms
Read →
Deep dive · the refuge trade, and an uneven tide
The day’s real lesson was that a single global force can split a region. A warning on the risk of a US rate increase sent the two-year Treasury yield to its highest since early 2025 and firmed the dollar, but Latin America did not move as one.
Where a market leaned on a resilient currency, the firmer dollar bit hardest: Chile’s three-day climb ended once its peso turned, and Argentina’s dollar pushed to a fresh high even as the country booked a record May trade surplus. Where the local story was strong enough, the tide barely registered: Colombia’s peso held a multi-year high and Brazil’s real sat steady.
Brazil’s rotation trade is the mirror image of the panic elsewhere: a cheap, banking-led market that becomes a refuge precisely when expensive US technology stumbles and oil cheapens. Whether it holds rests on Thursday’s US inflation gauge, the reading the Federal Reserve watches most closely.
Country by country
Brazil
Alone, and ahead.
Brazil stood almost alone as a gainer. As a crowded run in artificial-intelligence and chip stocks cracked in New York, foreign money rotated into Brazil’s cheaper, bank-heavy market, and cheaper oil after a US–Iran summit helped the big lenders lift the Ibovespa 0.52% to 171,259, a second straight gain, even as the central bank’s minutes warned that inflation risks now tilt to the upside.
Mexico
A rate call, on the eve.
Mexico’s IPC eased 0.41% to 66,848, a fifth straight down day as a firm dollar held the peso near 17.55, the day before the central bank decides interest rates on June 25. A stronger-than-expected April activity reading (2.30% year on year) steadied the currency, with the formal USMCA review opening July 1.
Argentina
The dollar hits a 2026 high.
Argentina’s wholesale dollar climbed to about 1,471 pesos, its strongest since early January, and the Merval slipped 0.89% as a global dollar rally pressed on the region. The move came even as the country booked a record May trade surplus, the first month in 2026 the dollar has outrun expected inflation.
Colombia
The hardest fall — but a firmer peso.
Colombia’s COLCAP dropped 1.93% to 2,347, the region’s worst session, yet the peso firmed to a multi-year high — the clearest sign the move was froth coming off rather than capital flight. The leftist Iván Cepeda is still seeking a recount of some 33,000 tally sheets after Abelardo de la Espriella’s one-point win, with the handover set for August 7.
Chile
A weaker peso, not weaker copper.
Chile’s IPSA fell 1.20% to 10,770, but the tell was the currency: a firmer dollar pushed the peso to about 913 and lithium slid roughly 5%, while copper held broadly steady. A twin fall in shares and currency pointed to foreign money stepping back, even as reports keep Santiago in the frame as the buyer of eleven F-35 stealth fighters.
Peru
A confirmed winner, a caretaker still.
Keiko Fujimori has been confirmed the runoff winner, her overseas votes sealing one of the closest finishes in Peru’s modern history, though a caretaker governs until the July 28 handover and her rival is contesting the count. A court handed the state a win in the long fight over China’s Chancay mega-port, a test of how Lima balances Beijing and Washington.
Uruguay
A clean brand, tested.
Uruguay cancelled its patrol-ship contract with Spain’s Cardama and alleged fraud, an awkward dent for a country that sells itself on clean institutions. A separate deadline looms on July 1, when its softened foreign-income tax rules take effect for new residents.
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 90-day state of emergency holds as the army keeps the roads open; an IMF programme of about $3.3 billion ($3.3bn) is the lifeline it is chasing.
Cuba
4.8
5
5
4
5
5
Blackouts and shortages grind on as Washington tightens the squeeze on the oil lifeline that keeps the island running.
Venezuela
4.2
5
5
5
3
3
Hollow but supervised: US-seated transition talks inch ahead as oil majors circle the Orinoco and Wall Street eyes a debt deal.
Peru
4.2
5
3
4
4
3
A market-friendly result is confirmed for Fujimori, but a caretaker governs to the July 28 handover; a court just backed the state over China’s Chancay port.
Colombia
4.0
4
4
4
2
4
The region’s worst session (COLCAP −1.93%) meets a recount demand over some 33,000 tally sheets, even as a firmer peso says capital is not fleeing.
Mexico
3.6
4
3
4
3
4
Banxico sets rates on June 25 as April activity beats and the USMCA review opens July 1; the peso steadies into the decision.
Ecuador
3.6
4
3
5
3
3
A dollarized, oil-dependent budget stays squeezed by softer crude, with the security crisis grinding on.
Brazil
3.4
4
4
3
3
4
The lone regional gainer as foreign money shelters from US tech, with a steady real, though a tariff clash with Washington still weighs.
Chile
3.0
3
3
3
2
3
Calm by regional standards as Kast settles in, but a weaker peso and a lithium slide ended a three-day climb.
Argentina
2.2
3
3
2
1
2
Austerity is still delivering surpluses and a record May trade balance, but a dollar at a 2026 high shows how the global tide runs against it.
Scale: 1 calm · 2 favourable · 3 mixed · 4 elevated · 5 severe. Pillars: politics, finances, security, markets, outside ties. Updated weekly; drivers refreshed daily.
The mood ahead
The refuge holds.
If Thursday’s US inflation reading comes in soft and the dollar rally cools, Brazil’s shelter trade can extend and the more currency-sensitive markets get breathing room. A steady Banxico and a clean Colombian certification would let the market-friendly story reassert itself.
The dollar keeps biting.
If US inflation runs hot and rate-hike bets harden, the dollar pushes higher still, pressing hardest on the markets that lean on their currencies — Chile, Argentina and Mexico. Thin political margins in Colombia and Peru leave little cushion if the tide keeps running out.
What to watch — Banxico’s June 25 decision, Thursday’s US inflation gauge, Colombia’s recount, and whether Brazil’s refuge trade can outlast a firmer dollar. These are our editorial views, not investment advice.
The briefing · 12 things worth knowing
Brazil stood alone. The Ibovespa rose 0.52% to 171,259, the region’s lone gainer, as foreign money fled a deepening US technology rout and cheaper oil lifted the banks.
The dollar pressed unevenly. Argentina’s dollar hit a 2026 high near 1,471 and Chile’s peso weakened to about 913, yet Brazil’s real held near 5.18 and Colombia’s peso firmed to a multi-year high.
Mexico’s rate call looms. Banxico decides on June 25 as April economic activity beat at 2.30% year on year and the USMCA review opens July 1.
Colombia fell hardest. The COLCAP dropped 1.93% to 2,347 in a post-vote give-back, even as the firmer peso signalled froth coming off rather than flight.
Mercosur opened a door to Asia. The bloc struck its first Asia trade deal, with Singapore as the gateway.
Brazil explained its cut. Copom minutes kept the door open to more easing but warned that inflation risks now tilt to the upside.
Argentina booked a record. A record May trade surplus landed even as the dollar outran inflation for the first time in 2026.
Mexico bet on AI. The country lined up billions for data centers its power grid may struggle to feed.
Peru won a port fight. A court backed the state in the dispute over China’s Chancay mega-port.
UK–Mexico trade opened up. The CPTPP Pacific pact took effect, widening UK–Mexico commerce.
Petrobras doubled down. The oil firm bet $1.2 billion ($1.2bn) on plant-based jet fuel and a new Campos frontier with Equinor.
World Cup drama built. Portugal crushed Uzbekistan 5-0 on a Ronaldo brace as Messi broke the World Cup goal record at 38.
Pipeline · business & sector watch
Energy. Cheaper oil, after a US–Iran summit eased fears of an energy shock, rippled across the region: it lifted Brazil’s banks while weighing on Petrobras, and kept squeezing Ecuador’s oil-dependent budget. Petrobras still committed $1.2 billion ($1.2bn) to bio-refining and a new Campos block with Equinor, a bet on the molecules under and around the region.
Industry & metals. Argentina moved to cut the red tape slowing its copper and lithium boom, and one Amazon state is set to win one in five of Brazil’s mining dollars, even as a lithium slide and a water fight shadowed Chile’s producers. The metals that bankroll the Andes are getting both more valuable and harder to pull from the ground.
Markets plumbing. Mercosur struck its first Asia trade deal with Singapore as the door, the CPTPP opened UK–Mexico commerce, and Mexico’s Oxxo kept moving toward a bank licence. The region’s trade and financial pipes are being re-laid even as the headline indices swing.
The week ahead
Five dates that move the region
Jun 25
Banxico decides & US inflation
Mexico’s central bank sets interest rates as the United States releases the inflation gauge the Federal Reserve watches most closely.
Jul 1
Uruguay tax & USMCA review
Uruguay’s softened foreign-income tax rules take effect for new residents as the formal USMCA review opens.
Jul 20
USMCA talks in Mexico City
In-person trade negotiations are set to begin, a key test of the North American trade relationship.
Jul 28
Peru’s handover
The confirmed runoff winner, Keiko Fujimori, is due to be sworn in, ending months of limbo.
Aug 7
Colombia’s handover
Abelardo de la Espriella is set to take office, pending the outcome of Cepeda’s recount demand.
Frequently asked questions
Why did Brazil rise while the rest of Latin America fell?
As a crowded run in US artificial-intelligence and chip stocks cracked, some foreign investors rotated into cheaper, steadier markets, and Brazil’s bank-heavy index caught the inflows. Cheaper oil after a US–Iran summit helped the lenders, and the Ibovespa rose 0.52% to 171,259 for a second day while Mexico, Chile, Argentina and Colombia all closed lower.
Did the strong dollar hit every Latin American currency?
No — the dollar pressed unevenly. A warning on US rate risk lifted the dollar broadly, sending Argentina’s wholesale rate to a 2026 high near 1,471 and weakening Chile’s peso to about 913, but Brazil’s real held steady near 5.18 and Colombia’s peso actually firmed to a multi-year high, a sign that election-bet money is staying.
What is Banxico expected to do on June 25?
Mexico’s central bank meets to set interest rates with the IPC easing to 66,848 and April activity surprising to the upside. The formal USMCA trade review opens July 1, so the decision and its language will be read for how Banxico balances growth against a firmer dollar.
Why did Colombia’s market fall hardest if its peso rose?
The COLCAP dropped 1.93% to 2,347 as a post-election rally unwound, but the peso strengthened to a multi-year high on the same day. A market that falls while its currency rises is shedding froth rather than seeing capital leave, with the August 7 handover and a recount demand still ahead.
Is Latin America still swinging to the right?
For now, yes. Colombia joins Argentina’s Milei, Chile’s Kast and a confirmed Fujimori in Peru, even as Brazil and Mexico anchor a weakening left and states like Bolivia and Cuba strain under their own pressures.
Read & watch
WatchBanxico’s June 25 rate decision and Thursday’s US inflation gauge, the Federal Reserve’s favored reading.
ReadThe Rio Times on Brazil standing apart as Wall Street’s technology trade cracked.
ReadArgentina’s dollar at a 2026 high and what it means for budgets in Buenos Aires.
WatchColombia’s recount fight and the August 7 handover in a country split down the middle.
Companion: today’s Latin America Power Map (PDF) — our full daily dossier on who holds power across the region.
Sources & method. The market snapshot uses Tuesday, June 23 closes from The Rio Times’ market data (Ibovespa, IPC, IPSA, Merval and COLCAP); USD/BRL (about 5.18) is from our June 24 Brazil stock-market wrap, USD/CLP (about 913) and USD/COP (about 3,417) from our Chile and Colombia wraps, and Argentina’s dollar (about 1,471) from our June 24 report; the S&P 500, Nasdaq and WTI crude are from our June 24 Global Economy Briefing. The reporting draws on The Rio Times’ June 23–24 coverage: Brazil’s lone-gainer session and Copom minutes, the uneven dollar, Argentina’s 2026-high dollar and record trade surplus, Colombia’s selloff and firmer peso, Chile’s weaker peso and lithium slide, Mexico’s Banxico decision and activity beat, Peru’s confirmed result and Chancay port ruling, the Mercosur–Singapore deal, the CPTPP, and the region’s World Cup notes. The 1–5 risk scores are The Rio Times’ own weekly read. This is editorial analysis, not investment advice.
View original source — Rio Times ↗



