Key Facts
The IPSA fell 0.88% to 10,675 on June 24, a second straight drop, closing on its session low.
It fell even as copper rose — the usual driver gained more than 1%, yet the index still slipped.
A weaker peso did the damage — the currency softened for a second day as foreign money stepped back.
A global risk-off mood pressed on it — funds trimmed emerging-market exposure amid a tech-led selloff abroad.
Local fundamentals intact — the pressure was external and flow-driven, not a homegrown shock.
Today’s Focus
Chile’s market fell for a second day, and the way it fell is the story. The IPSA dropped 0.88% to 10,675, closing on its session low — yet copper, the metal that usually sets the direction for Chilean shares, actually rose on the day.
That contradiction points the explanation outward. With copper firmer, the weight came instead from a weaker peso and a global pullback from risk, as investors trimmed their holdings in emerging markets amid a technology-led selloff abroad. The currency has now softened for two sessions, the clearest sign that foreign money is stepping back rather than that anything has changed at home.
It is, in other words, an imported weakness. Chile’s own fundamentals — a rising copper price among them — look fine; the pressure is coming from outside, through the currency and global fund flows.
What matters today. Copper and the peso are the swing factors — if copper holds and the dollar stops rising, Chile could steady; if the global adjustment runs on, the pressure likely persists.
01 The session in one read
The IPSA closed at 10,675, down 0.88% and about 94 points, settling right on the session low after trading as high as 10,888. It was the second straight fall, leaving the index back on the medium-term averages it had been hovering around and a little nearer its long-term trend line. After a brief mid-week climb, the market has now given back ground for two days running.
The defining feature was the split between the metal and the market. Copper, normally the engine of Chilean shares, rose more than 1% — and yet the index fell. That tells you the day was not about Chile’s commodities but about the things sitting on top of them: a weaker peso and a global mood that had investors pulling back from riskier markets.
Assessment — Imported weakness, copper aside HIGH
The dominant force was a weaker peso and a global pullback from risk, not anything local — confirmed by a rising copper price that failed to lift the index. The variables to watch are copper and the dollar.
02 The day’s numbers
Measure
Level
Change
Read
IPSA close
10,675
−0.88%
Closed on its low, a second straight drop.
Session range
10,675–10,888
—
Gave back an early high, settling at the bottom.
Currency (USD/CLP)
919
−0.52%
Peso weaker for a second day — foreign money stepping back.
Copper
6.01
+1.18%
Rose — yet could not lift the index.
Momentum (daily)
~49
—
Near the midline — consolidating, not extreme.
Read together, the table captures the day’s paradox. Copper rose, which would usually help, but the peso fell and the index closed on its low — proof the weakness came from the currency and global flows, not the commodity that normally drives Chile. The currency change reflects the peso weakening as the dollar firmed.
Live Market IntelligenceChile — Live Market BoardInside: market breadth, the sector heatmap, currencies & rates, the Latin America scoreboard and the full instrument board.
Rio Times · Live Market Intelligence
Chile — Live Market Board
Santiago
Jun 25, 2026 · 03:02
S&P IPSA · benchmark
10,675
-0.88%
L 10,675day rangeH 10,888
Market breadth · 11 names
18% advancing
2 ▲ advancing9 declining ▼
Currencies, rates & key inputs
USD / CLP
919.04
+0.52%
Copper
5.99
+0.83%
Gold
3,999
+0.22%
Sector heatmap · average move today
Industrials
+3.00%
LATAM AIR
Materials
-0.82%
SQM-B, CMPC
Utilities
-1.26%
ENELAM
Other
-1.47%
COPPER, SOUTHERN COPPER
Financials
-1.55%
BSANTANDER, BANCO CHILE
Consumer Disc.
-2.22%
FALABELLA
Consumer Staples
-2.22%
CENCOSUD
Energy
-2.30%
COPEC
Latin America scoreboard
IndexLastTodayStrength
IbovespaBrazil
170,507
-0.44%
S&P/BMV IPCMexico
66,278
-0.85%
S&P IPSAChile
10,675
-0.88%
S&P MERVALArgentina
3,110,490
-4.25%
MSCI COLCAPColombia
2,270.97
-3.24%
BVL S&P PerúPeru
55,438.99
-0.40%
Full instrument board
InstrumentLastChangeYoYPrev.HighLowVolume
IPSA
10,675
-0.88%
—
10,770
10,888
10,675
—
USD/CLP
919.04
+0.52%
-1.75%
914.28
919.16
919.01
—
COPPER
5.99
+0.83%
+21.97%
5.94
6.02
5.95
4,055
SQM-B
69,500
-0.93%
+117.53%
70,150
72,000
69,500
216,294
COPEC
5,830
-2.30%
-9.89%
5,967
5,972
5,830
475,447
BSANTANDER
72.01
-1.36%
+25.45%
73.00
73.85
72.01
44,233,859
FALABELLA
5,560
-2.22%
+11.83%
5,686
5,781
5,560
1,129,953
ENELAM
81.76
-1.26%
-8.44%
82.80
82.80
81.30
20,744,525
CENCOSUD
2,111
-2.22%
-33.51%
2,159
2,180
2,111
2,868,920
CMPC
1,036
-0.71%
-28.52%
1,043
1,050
1,026
2,072,790
BANCO CHILE
175.02
-1.73%
+26.83%
178.10
179.99
175.02
51,057,339
LATAM AIR
26.11
+3.00%
+43.46%
25.35
26.63
25.52
1,369,610,073
SOUTHERN COPPER
171.84
-3.77%
+83.47%
178.57
175.12
169.70
1,693,967
Largest moves today
SOUTHERN COPPER
171.84
-3.77%
LATAM AIR
26.11
+3.00%
COPEC
5,830
-2.30%
FALABELLA
5,560
-2.22%
CENCOSUD
2,111
-2.22%
BANCO CHILE
175.02
-1.73%
BSANTANDER
72.01
-1.36%
ENELAM
81.76
-1.26%
The session read
The S&P IPSA eased 0.88%, with breadth negative — 2 of 11 names higher. Industrials led, while Energy lagged.
03 Why it moved — a weaker peso and global risk-off
The single most diagnostic fact is that the IPSA fell while copper rose. Chile’s market usually takes its cue from the red metal, so a higher copper price on a down day immediately points the explanation away from the commodity and toward the forces layered over it. The first was the peso, which weakened for a second straight session; a softer currency on a falling market is the signature of foreign investors stepping back rather than locals repositioning. The second was a broad global pullback from risk, with a technology-led selloff abroad prompting funds to trim their exposure to emerging markets like Chile.
That combination is why the index could not hold even with copper firm. The weakness was imported — transmitted through the currency and through global fund flows — rather than rooted in anything that changed at home. Analysts framed the path ahead in exactly those terms: if copper steadies and the dollar stops appreciating, Chile could partly decouple from the global slide; if the adjustment abroad continues, the index will likely stay under pressure even though its local fundamentals have not meaningfully shifted.
04 The day’s movers
Driver
Level / Move
Change
Note
IPSA
10,675
−0.88%
Second straight drop, closed on its low.
Peso (USD/CLP)
919
−0.52%
Weaker again — the day’s real driver.
Copper
6.01
+1.18%
Rose — the usual engine, sidelined by flows.
Lithium
78.91
+0.61%
Also firmer — local commodities were not the problem.
The story within the story is what did the damage and what did not. The commodities that anchor Chile’s economy — copper and lithium — both rose, removing the usual suspects. The culprits were the peso and the global mood, a reminder that on some days Chile’s market is moved less by what it digs out of the ground than by where the world’s money wants to be.
05 The regional scoreboard
Index
Country
Change
Ibovespa
Brazil
−0.44%
IPSA
Chile
−0.88%
IPC
Mexico
−0.85%
Colcap
Colombia
−3.24%
Merval
Argentina
−4.25%
The region was red across the board, and Chile’s loss sat in the milder half. Argentina tumbled on an index-classification setback and Colombia fell on its contested election, while Brazil and Mexico also slipped. A global pullback from risk and a firm dollar pressed on everyone. Chile’s drop, cushioned by a rising copper price, was smaller than most — its weakness more a matter of the weaker peso and outflows than any home-grown shock, fitting the day’s shared external theme.
06 The technical picture
Momentum is neutral, not stretched. The daily gauge sits right around the midline near 49, the profile of a market consolidating rather than trending, and two down days have eased it toward the lower part of its recent range without forcing a break. The shorter-term trend measure is flattening near a low level, consistent with a market drifting under outside pressure rather than breaking down on its own account.
The levels frame the next move. The rising long-term trend line near 10,630, just below the close, is the first support that keeps the broader uptrend intact; a clean break would signal the slide is deepening. Just above, the medium-term averages around 10,660 to 10,760 are the immediate resistance, and the record near 11,720 marks how far the broader pullback has run. With copper firm, the key swing factor from here is whether the peso steadies or keeps weakening.
07 What to watch
The peso near 919: the day’s real driver — whether it steadies or keeps weakening is the difference between Chile decoupling and staying pressured.
Copper: the metal rose this session; if it holds, it gives Chile a foundation to steady even amid a global pullback.
The global risk mood: whether the technology-led selloff abroad stays contained or deepens into a broader reduction of emerging-market exposure.
The 10,630 trend line: the long-term support that keeps Chile’s broader uptrend intact.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why did Chile’s IPSA fall on June 24, 2026?
The IPSA dropped 0.88% to 10,675, a second straight decline, closing on its session low. The striking part is that it fell even though copper, Chile’s main export and usual market driver, actually rose on the day. The weight came from outside: a weaker peso and a global pullback from risk, as investors trimmed exposure to emerging markets amid a technology-led selloff abroad. With the currency softening for a second day, foreign money was stepping back, and that external pressure outweighed the friendly commodity backdrop at home.
Why did the index fall when copper rose?
That contradiction is the heart of the session. Copper, which usually sets the direction for Chilean shares, gained more than 1%, and lithium firmed too — a backdrop that would normally lift the market. But the index answers to more than its commodities, and on June 24 two other forces dominated: a weaker peso, which signals foreign investors pulling back, and a broad global risk-off mood that prompted funds to reduce emerging-market holdings. When those outweigh even a rising copper price, it tells you the pressure is external and flow-driven, not about Chile’s own fundamentals.
Has the Chilean market been overvalued?
No — it has been trading sideways near the middle of its range, not climbing to extremes. Momentum sits right around the midline, neither stretched nor washed out, the profile of a market consolidating. Two down days have nudged the index toward its long-term trend line without breaking it, and it remains within a few percent of the record it set earlier in the year. This reads as a pullback driven by outside flows rather than a correction of a homegrown excess.
What levels should investors watch next?
The long-term trend line near 10,630, just below the close, is the first support that keeps the broader uptrend intact; a clean break would signal the slide is deepening. Just above sit the medium-term averages around 10,660 to 10,760, the zone the index must reclaim to steady itself. The record near 11,720 marks how far the broader pullback has run. Copper and the peso are the variables most likely to decide direction: if copper holds and the dollar stops rising, Chile could steady; if the global adjustment continues, the pressure likely persists.
How did the rest of Latin America trade?
It was a broadly red day, and Chile’s loss was among the milder ones. Argentina’s Merval tumbled more than 4% on an index-classification setback and Colombia’s COLCAP fell over 3% on its contested election, while Brazil’s Ibovespa and Mexico’s IPC also slipped. A global pullback from risk and a firm dollar pressed on the whole region. Chile’s drop, cushioned by a rising copper price, was smaller than most — its weakness was more about the weaker peso and outflows than any local shock.
Connected Coverage
This report continues The Rio Times’ daily coverage of Chile’s market: see the prior session, Chile’s Stock Market Falls as a Weaker Peso Ends Its Climb. For the wider regional picture on a broadly red day, see the Global Economy Briefing, and for how the same global risk-off mood ran through other markets, our companion Brazil, Argentina and crypto reports. Together they show one external current — a global pullback from risk — pressing unevenly across the region’s markets.
Reported by Richard Mann for The Rio Times — Latin American financial news. Filed June 25, 2026, covering the June 24 session. Index, currency and single-stock levels are session-close readings via the Rio Times market data feed (Santiago Exchange and regional exchanges); technical readings are from the daily chart. Figures are point-in-time and not investment advice.
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